pointfive0
32 Cal.
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2011
- Messages
- 5
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Hello everyone and thank you in advance for the great advice! I know someone here will be able to help, and hope to meet someone in the Oshawa / Toronto Canada area with the same gun!
I'm sure the kit gun builders out the are the ones that will be able to help me.
My gun is actually a Euroarms, made by Investarms, but is identical to the Thompson Centre .50 cal Hawken except the engraving on the lock plate. It was made around 1977, .50 cal, 1:48 twist, 28" barrel.
I've googled "Thompson Centre problem" and have found many problems, most of which I have, and more. Here is a new one as of yesterday:
For some reason the barrel is not fitting properly anymore. Every time I take the barrel off to clean it, it becomes more and more difficult to reassemble the barrel hook on the tang (in other words I can't assemble the barrel on the stock easily).
Yesterday was the breaking point. The barrel will just not sit properly anymore. The breech hook doesn't want to grab right. I am thinking the entire fit and finish on these things is off because of the foreign wood used. I believe it's some type of mahogany. I'm thinking because it was made in Italy, it was not acclimatized in this area BEFORE being machined, and the wood is moving / twisting around a bit, causing the hole spacing and cutouts to be off. (This may no longer be a problem as the new Thompson Center guns are advertised as being "solid american walnut")
This may explain why the hammer on my gun is misaligned, causing misfires, which was never a problem for my father 30 years ago when he bought it new.
I took the breech plug tang off completely for inspection, don't see any damage, only wear from swiveling in and out, which I'm guessing is normal. I connected the barrel to the tang and tried assembling them on the stock as a pair, but I have to force the barrel down lightly (about 5 lbs of pressure) to be able to insert the wedge pin. I'm certainly not deforming the barrel, but there IS tension holding it down, and I DON'T like this! I have no idea what to do next.
Has anyone ever built a CVA Hawken kit gun like this? If you're out there, you can probably help me.
This gun has been babied. It is near MINT condition, with no signs of wear, barely a scratch on the thing. Always kept clean, oiled, and stored horizontally.
It constantly misfires. I've changed nipples three or four times now with no improvement. 2 caps are fired off every time I go out. Gun is cleaned with alcohol prior to first shot, and cleaned with alcohol between each shot, followed by dry patches. As per my black powder loading manual, I'm using 70gr FFg with .490" round ball, .010" patch, and grouping was all over the map, and all of a sudden with the use of alcohol I've brought it down to 6" groups at 50 yards, a dramatic improvement!
Problems I still have with gun:
-Percussion caps are never consistent (purchased musket nipple, and musket caps on order!)
-the hammer is off centre (too far back) causing missfires and hangfires?
-the powder doesn't always get down into flash channel even with 4-5 good raps when pouring powder, further causing missfires (maybe drill it out one size bigger?)
-I've had to offset the rear sight about 1/8" to the right to get any kind of accuracy
-brass pieces on loading rod have unglued themselves on both ends (thread and loading end) solution: cross drill 0.060" hole through brass and wood and insert solid brass nail and peen end (home-made rivet)
I unscrewed the breech plug today to get a good look at it, and get some real light in the barrel, and everything is flawless and clean as a whistle. Barrel is MINT, Channels and holes are very clean.
I totally dismantled the lock to see if there was any way to adjust it and apparently there is not. I'm about to wrap this thing around a tree.
Thanks again in advance!
I'm sure the kit gun builders out the are the ones that will be able to help me.
My gun is actually a Euroarms, made by Investarms, but is identical to the Thompson Centre .50 cal Hawken except the engraving on the lock plate. It was made around 1977, .50 cal, 1:48 twist, 28" barrel.
I've googled "Thompson Centre problem" and have found many problems, most of which I have, and more. Here is a new one as of yesterday:
For some reason the barrel is not fitting properly anymore. Every time I take the barrel off to clean it, it becomes more and more difficult to reassemble the barrel hook on the tang (in other words I can't assemble the barrel on the stock easily).
Yesterday was the breaking point. The barrel will just not sit properly anymore. The breech hook doesn't want to grab right. I am thinking the entire fit and finish on these things is off because of the foreign wood used. I believe it's some type of mahogany. I'm thinking because it was made in Italy, it was not acclimatized in this area BEFORE being machined, and the wood is moving / twisting around a bit, causing the hole spacing and cutouts to be off. (This may no longer be a problem as the new Thompson Center guns are advertised as being "solid american walnut")
This may explain why the hammer on my gun is misaligned, causing misfires, which was never a problem for my father 30 years ago when he bought it new.
I took the breech plug tang off completely for inspection, don't see any damage, only wear from swiveling in and out, which I'm guessing is normal. I connected the barrel to the tang and tried assembling them on the stock as a pair, but I have to force the barrel down lightly (about 5 lbs of pressure) to be able to insert the wedge pin. I'm certainly not deforming the barrel, but there IS tension holding it down, and I DON'T like this! I have no idea what to do next.
Has anyone ever built a CVA Hawken kit gun like this? If you're out there, you can probably help me.
This gun has been babied. It is near MINT condition, with no signs of wear, barely a scratch on the thing. Always kept clean, oiled, and stored horizontally.
It constantly misfires. I've changed nipples three or four times now with no improvement. 2 caps are fired off every time I go out. Gun is cleaned with alcohol prior to first shot, and cleaned with alcohol between each shot, followed by dry patches. As per my black powder loading manual, I'm using 70gr FFg with .490" round ball, .010" patch, and grouping was all over the map, and all of a sudden with the use of alcohol I've brought it down to 6" groups at 50 yards, a dramatic improvement!
Problems I still have with gun:
-Percussion caps are never consistent (purchased musket nipple, and musket caps on order!)
-the hammer is off centre (too far back) causing missfires and hangfires?
-the powder doesn't always get down into flash channel even with 4-5 good raps when pouring powder, further causing missfires (maybe drill it out one size bigger?)
-I've had to offset the rear sight about 1/8" to the right to get any kind of accuracy
-brass pieces on loading rod have unglued themselves on both ends (thread and loading end) solution: cross drill 0.060" hole through brass and wood and insert solid brass nail and peen end (home-made rivet)
I unscrewed the breech plug today to get a good look at it, and get some real light in the barrel, and everything is flawless and clean as a whistle. Barrel is MINT, Channels and holes are very clean.
I totally dismantled the lock to see if there was any way to adjust it and apparently there is not. I'm about to wrap this thing around a tree.
Thanks again in advance!