HomeinDixie
32 Cal.
- Joined
- May 4, 2006
- Messages
- 16
- Reaction score
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My new crocket rifle locked a jag in the breach a few days ago. I had to pull the breach plug to free the ramrod and jag with patch. The culprit was a free space between the barrel and the face of the breach plug that let the cleaning patch bunch up around the neck of the jag on the back stroke.
This evening I pulled the breach plug again, took the dial calipers to the problem and devised a plan! It seems my gap was roughly .040 inch. The inside diameter of the breach plug was .322 so the jag goes very far down into the breach plug, and the outside diameter of the threads was 0.52 inch. I made a quick trip to the hardware store and found that the washer that would need the least amount of grinding and filing was a standard 7mm flat washer. After returning home I ground the OD of the washer to clear the threads in the barrel, opened the ID of the washer hole to .322 and filled the thickness to just over the .040 thickness. I then reinstalled the breach plug with a perfect fit and alighment. Now patches don't bunch up in the breach area of the stroke. This may be more trouble than any of the other crockett owners are willing to go through, but it was worth it for me. :hmm: This also means there is not a big void there to trap powder residue anymore.
Afew observations.
After taking this rifle apart, I know why the rifle wouldn't group worth a darn with low powder loads. there is at least 1/2 inch of space at the breach of the barrel that must be filled with powder. If it isn't, you will, more likley than not, be shooting the ball down the barrel with a sloppy patch to say the least, because the PRB can be pushed into the smooth breach area. I may expermient with some kind of filler (felt wad) to keep the PRB in the rifling.
While I was at it. I cut the back of the snail even where the nipple sits. I found that it is very hard to get a nipple wrench in there, and I wanted to install a flash cup. I ground and filled the area down, pollished it on the pollishing wheel and reblued. Looks like it was made that way and I hope the flash cup will contain some of the burning action of the caps firing. This rifle has taken some tinkering to get it to shoot like I expect, but the initial range trip looks promsing indeed!
This evening I pulled the breach plug again, took the dial calipers to the problem and devised a plan! It seems my gap was roughly .040 inch. The inside diameter of the breach plug was .322 so the jag goes very far down into the breach plug, and the outside diameter of the threads was 0.52 inch. I made a quick trip to the hardware store and found that the washer that would need the least amount of grinding and filing was a standard 7mm flat washer. After returning home I ground the OD of the washer to clear the threads in the barrel, opened the ID of the washer hole to .322 and filled the thickness to just over the .040 thickness. I then reinstalled the breach plug with a perfect fit and alighment. Now patches don't bunch up in the breach area of the stroke. This may be more trouble than any of the other crockett owners are willing to go through, but it was worth it for me. :hmm: This also means there is not a big void there to trap powder residue anymore.
Afew observations.
After taking this rifle apart, I know why the rifle wouldn't group worth a darn with low powder loads. there is at least 1/2 inch of space at the breach of the barrel that must be filled with powder. If it isn't, you will, more likley than not, be shooting the ball down the barrel with a sloppy patch to say the least, because the PRB can be pushed into the smooth breach area. I may expermient with some kind of filler (felt wad) to keep the PRB in the rifling.
While I was at it. I cut the back of the snail even where the nipple sits. I found that it is very hard to get a nipple wrench in there, and I wanted to install a flash cup. I ground and filled the area down, pollished it on the pollishing wheel and reblued. Looks like it was made that way and I hope the flash cup will contain some of the burning action of the caps firing. This rifle has taken some tinkering to get it to shoot like I expect, but the initial range trip looks promsing indeed!