eggwelder
40 Cal.
- Joined
- May 26, 2015
- Messages
- 936
- Reaction score
- 338
Bought this Saturday at a local gun show. Not sure what i have here. Barrel has what I believe is a gain twist- its straight leaving the forcing cone then starts to twist. I have never seen this type of rifling before. Was touted as an original. Has manufacture date of 1868 based on the serial no. Was looked at by another vendor who specializes in antiques, he was pretty convinced it was original. The frame is civilian pattern- no notches for the shoulder stock. Has only colt markings, but after i got it home and gave it a thorough cleaning, many of the parts are looking too new. The loading lever and hammer look too new. The trigger guard appears to have been soda blasted, but could possibly be still an unpolished investment lost wax casting. am hoping it was bought and never used…..or rebuilt with later parts.
it`s obviously been reblued, and the frame is blue as well, unlike the Italian models which all seem to be color case hardened.
the biggest issue i`m having is that the trigger screw from my ASM 1851 Navy threads into the trigger screw hole on this one, which leads me to think it may be a clever forgery. The serial number on the back strap indicates a manufacturing date of 1869- it does not match the other three numbers, and the cylinder has “Colts Patent No 055”.
the nipples, which do need replacing, seem too short to set off any make of cap that i have, they don`t go bang, but when removed and put on another percussion gun, the caps fire fine. Once again, the ASM nipples will thread nicely into the cylinder. One chamber is stripped at the nipple threads, leaving me with a 5 shot six gun.
there are no Italian markings on this gun.
it locks up tight and only a little play if you do not cock it like you mean business. it seems not to like a timid shooter.
the serial number and the light pitting on the barrel, sides of the frame and the lightly beaten trigger guard all indicate a well taken care of original that was fired rarely. The threadings and hammer indicate to me a second Gen colt.
need your thoughts before i make any further decisions.
it`s obviously been reblued, and the frame is blue as well, unlike the Italian models which all seem to be color case hardened.
the biggest issue i`m having is that the trigger screw from my ASM 1851 Navy threads into the trigger screw hole on this one, which leads me to think it may be a clever forgery. The serial number on the back strap indicates a manufacturing date of 1869- it does not match the other three numbers, and the cylinder has “Colts Patent No 055”.
the nipples, which do need replacing, seem too short to set off any make of cap that i have, they don`t go bang, but when removed and put on another percussion gun, the caps fire fine. Once again, the ASM nipples will thread nicely into the cylinder. One chamber is stripped at the nipple threads, leaving me with a 5 shot six gun.
there are no Italian markings on this gun.
it locks up tight and only a little play if you do not cock it like you mean business. it seems not to like a timid shooter.
the serial number and the light pitting on the barrel, sides of the frame and the lightly beaten trigger guard all indicate a well taken care of original that was fired rarely. The threadings and hammer indicate to me a second Gen colt.
need your thoughts before i make any further decisions.
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