I need some help and assistance on my Walker. I have a “Colt” 2nd generation Walker that I bought several years back and never fired.
The first thing I noticed was the nipples were too big for a standard #11 cap. I polished the nipples and fixed this issue and the caps now fit the nipples fine.
Today I went out to shoot and the caps were not firing reliably (1out of 6 fired). I did a visual inspection and noticed there was what I felt was too large a gap between the hammer at rest and the nipple. I backed the nipples out a turn or two and this solved the problem. Gun fired reliably for the next five full cylinders (30 shots). I did not do an accuracy check just a function firing.
Tonight after a thorough cleaning I reassembled and feel that the cylinder seems to have too much fore and aft movement. I know it needs some. I measured the cylinder gap with the barrel using a set of automotive feeler gauges. I can slide a .014 (.356mm) feeler gauge in the gap.
Does anyone know what this gap should be? How do I adjust this for a permanent fix? I considered adding thin washers under the nipples but if the gap is too big this isn’t the best solution.
Does anyone know of a very competent gunsmith for these revolvers? I briefly considered trying to contact Colt but figured that would be a waste of time and effort.
Thanks,
Dave Z
The first thing I noticed was the nipples were too big for a standard #11 cap. I polished the nipples and fixed this issue and the caps now fit the nipples fine.
Today I went out to shoot and the caps were not firing reliably (1out of 6 fired). I did a visual inspection and noticed there was what I felt was too large a gap between the hammer at rest and the nipple. I backed the nipples out a turn or two and this solved the problem. Gun fired reliably for the next five full cylinders (30 shots). I did not do an accuracy check just a function firing.
Tonight after a thorough cleaning I reassembled and feel that the cylinder seems to have too much fore and aft movement. I know it needs some. I measured the cylinder gap with the barrel using a set of automotive feeler gauges. I can slide a .014 (.356mm) feeler gauge in the gap.
Does anyone know what this gap should be? How do I adjust this for a permanent fix? I considered adding thin washers under the nipples but if the gap is too big this isn’t the best solution.
Does anyone know of a very competent gunsmith for these revolvers? I briefly considered trying to contact Colt but figured that would be a waste of time and effort.
Thanks,
Dave Z