One more Q,,,is the lock square with the world, or is it slightly tipped in at the bottom. A small shim at the bottom will have a large effect at the hammer.
it doesnt' look like a rely bad fit!!?View attachment 60580
This is a lock I'm altering to fit the stock and barrel on this gun I picked up, since it doesn't fit well.
The lock is obviously a knock off of one of the old historic warranted locks, but does anyone know the company that made this one, and/or the model?
I am looking to heat and bend this hammer slightly, and would like to locate a replacement part in case I ruin the hammer my first try.
I've been drawing a blank on the company name for 2 weeks. And no online searches are turning up any results.
Also, does anyone possibly have an extra hammer for one?
OK! do the feet / toes come with it?Well it wouldn't really help much. It's a .50 caliber stock for sure, I can tell that much because the ramrod for the .36 caliber barrel slides out when you tip the gun south of horizontal. So had to install a spring catch to put tension on it. The hammer was not built for this barrel for sure. Just doesn't line up with the nipple. But such an accurate rifle, I figured I could do something for it. It's a squirrel killer for sure. Just needs one last thing fixed.
The lock and stock may have actually been mates though. But its hard to tell I know nothing of the guns history before it was in my hands, other than coming from a basement build somewhere along the lines: that much was obvious since the guy drilled holes in barrel for stock keys instead of dovetailing and ordering the proper pieces.
I'm a really big squirrel hunter and am hoping to make this gun into an accurate rifle that I can hunt a lot with and not worry about banging up.
View attachment 61176
Dern thing shoots good for sure, when it does go off. Just this damn hammer not landing square.
I would dremmel it out as suggested, but I would like to find a replacement hammer and try bending first. And dremmel as a last resort. It's off center enough that I just don't have much metal to dremmel out. Bending is actually a better option. Just need to find out the company and model number of lock so I can start searching the auctions online every couple weeks.
The barrel is secured with pins that actually pass through the bottom of the barrel - those holes had to be drilled using a jig of some kind. No dovetailed anything. No stock keys.I think that is the rifle. I had known the barrel came from the obsolete gun parts company numerich arms. As it has a stamp, but it appears they distributed the kit.
Now that I know the name I was easily able to look up parts for the lock on their site as well. I think I will now try shimming as discussed earlier though.
Thanks!
I suspect this stock was their .45 caliber model then and the .36 barrel was installed later. I'm assuming that because the stock is drilled and has hardware for a 3/8" ramrod which is much too big for the .36 barrel, which requires the smaller 5/16". But the 5/16" that I ordered drops right out of the stock when you tip the gun. Unless the maker just neglected to install the catch. (I fished a rolled up piece of paper from the stock that the guy had been using to hold a broken 5/16" ramrod in place).
Let me ask you, how does the barrel on your rifle accept the stock keys? This barrel has holes that appear to have been drilled at home. Are yours dovetailed?
Yes, quite heavy. That's the only part I dont like. But if I place my left hand at trigger guard and allow my shoulder to keep the gun from tipping, it sights very stable offhand. The curved buttplate helps for this.
Your rifle, recognized from the full length picture posted, is a Hopkins & Allen Minuteman.
Enter your email address to join: