Colt 3rd Dragoon (made around 1980) with over 0.010" cylinder gap, Also, that gap is dependent upon exactly where it is measured because the back of the barrel (cone?) face is way out of flat. This was right out of the box.
Had to grind off over 0.005" to clean this up. NOW it's flat.
Pushing the cylinder forward until it butts up to the cone, no light can be seen between the two. NOW they're parallel to each other.
Of course, all this only worsens the endshake. (Fix one problem, create another, etc ...)
So ... next step is to make a shim to fit between the frame and the back of the cylinder. My target is a 0.004" cylinder gap.
When re-attaching the barrel, I typically place a feeler gage between the cylinder and cone as the wedge is driven in (in this case it'll be a 0.004" feeler).
When a drag is felt on the feeler, and if I did all this right, the cone and cylinder should land parallel to each other as they are now.
Had to grind off over 0.005" to clean this up. NOW it's flat.
Pushing the cylinder forward until it butts up to the cone, no light can be seen between the two. NOW they're parallel to each other.
Of course, all this only worsens the endshake. (Fix one problem, create another, etc ...)
So ... next step is to make a shim to fit between the frame and the back of the cylinder. My target is a 0.004" cylinder gap.
When re-attaching the barrel, I typically place a feeler gage between the cylinder and cone as the wedge is driven in (in this case it'll be a 0.004" feeler).
When a drag is felt on the feeler, and if I did all this right, the cone and cylinder should land parallel to each other as they are now.