Keeping Walker cylinder turning freely

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I have posted this many times, will one more time...

I bought a 1851 Navy made by Uberti and it shoots great right out of the box, pretty good accuracy considering the sighting system.

If I wanted to "improve it" I would do the same as SPQR70AD and start with a better gun, meaning a Remington.
Interesting, just about every Remington new or not I've handled with one and only one exception has been out of time and not indexing the way it should. So how is the Remington better? If it's the closed frame argument you need to look a little closer at that "superior" frame especially where the loading ram passes thru the frame. It's real thin there as well as under the rear sight. As to the 1851 Navy...short arbor. If you tap the wedge in until it seats and the cylinder locks up it's short. You can help that pretty good accuracy and make it excellent. As to cost most of the belt pistols can be had for around 350 to 450 depending on where one looks, add 220.00 plus return shipping and you have something that will serve you for a lifetime if taken care of properly. If you find a used one for say a hundred bucks that becomes even more cost effective.
 
Makes you wonder which are more popular at pistol matches at the NMLRA.

Remington or Colts, what is your guess?

I never had any issues with the Remington I once owned and if I bought a Colt that needed work on it to make it shoot, I would sell it and buy a Remington.
Since I never plan to "hot rod" any black powder gun the whole "which design is stronger" thing is a red herring. History has answered that question.
 
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Makes you wonder which are more popular at pistol matches at the NMLRA.

Remington or Colts, what is your guess?
Oh!! Remingtons with expensive barrels screwed in for sure!! Imagine how much a "like" barrel assy would be for an open-top!!
(Which is my point about the top strap being the platform seen today for modern SAs!)

Mike
 
Makes you wonder which are more popular at pistol matches at the NMLRA.

Remington or Colts, what is your guess?

I never had any issues with the Remington I once owned and if I bought a Colt that needed work on it to make it shoot, I would sell it and buy a Remington.
Since I never plan to "hot rod" any black powder gun the whole "which design is stronger" thing is a red herring. History has answered that question.
When it comes to target shooting sold frame guns rule hands down unless it an open frame venue ! Actually a properly set up open frame gun would have nearly equal accuracy potential if it has equal sighting definition capability.
 
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I bought a 1851 Navy made by Uberti and it shoots great right out of the box, pretty good accuracy considering the sighting system.

If I wanted to "improve it" I would do the same as SPQR70AD and start with a better gun, meaning a Remington.

You sound very much like myself. I got a Remington as a copy of the ASP Remington I was given. Shot ok, sure never that great. Guy I sold it to, he got better accuracy out of it but again not what I think of as great. So lets put in some actual numbers and distances. My shooting is at 25 yards and hand rested (I can't hold a gun steady enough to do well, I always used 25 yards as my metric for pistols). So, 2 inches is good. 3" is decent (my opinion) past that, meh. The 47 Walker when I got it shot fine, indexed nicely, worked fine (sans the caps dumping into the hammer curve and frame curve or into the action). 5 inches. Remington was 5-6 inches. So kind of a wash.

I have an ROA, as a BP gun I love it mostly (I find that finarcky loader ram setup annoying). The 47 Walker untouiched was as accurate, probably more so. I need to talk to D Yager and Mike to see if they think it can be improved accuracy wise.

Since I started working on the short arbor on the 47 Walker, its gotten a lot better. I had one 6 shot group of 1 inch. Now I call that a one off, something came in sync both load wise and how I had the Wedge set, but there it was. 3 inch groups it will come out when I get it all setup in its sweet spot.

Now I am something of a Piker. To start I used washers for shims (shame on me) as well as stacking beer can shims as the washers caved.

I think I was giving it a decent smack, no sighns of wrecking it. But Mike and his decent smack with a small plastic mallet, hmmm. So, I have a range box and bought one just to keep in there so I was not using a wood block or screwdriver handle. So the wedge seating was decent even if the shim setup sucked.

Well that all went to heck last shooting session, I made up a shim to let me keep shooting but am working on the right fix. Its not that I did not believe Mike or D Yager, it was I just did not want to spend the time making it, I was into quick and easy. And for me it also was a way to get my mind around the mechanics of it, what various shim sizes did to .

Get it too much and the barrel assemly would not contact the frame.

Too little and cylinder bind. Someplace just about right, good accuracy but some aspects of the cylinder gap (end shake).

Saturday night special comes to mind. Low cost guns, not a given they were junk as the broader perception got to be, but not a S&W or a Colt (and latter Ruger etc). Some of them were over the edge and not worth fixing. Some did fine for the cost and use.

The Itallian guns are made to a price point. Doesn't matter if they are a Ubertti or a Pietta. Most that buy them are not into smooth or accuracy. They want the fun of black powder shooting. That is fine but leaves a void where those who know what they can do want them capable of doing it. Mike and D Yager fill that need be it open top or close top.

You are are not going to get a S&W qualoity gun out of the box and as was noted, they all have custom shops to slick them up.

My two ROA were setup wrong for the Bolt. Drag marks. Mike was gracious to give me time on a phone call to fix that. So Ruger had its quality issues. Both unlocked the bolt ok, but it then came back up and touched the cylinder until it indexed into the slot. Ok, fixed. Modern gun not setup right.

ddd
 
Well bless your heart, you've managed to be even more silly than the last few postings. First off what difference does all that make as long as the chambers and bore are in alignment, the pistol goes bang the bullet goes down the barrel and heads off to where you aimed it. There's always gonna be manufacturing tolerance errors that need to be dealt with on these replicas such as short arbors, late timing and chamber misalignment. So just for the sake of argument( you seem to live for argument) what is your solution for dealing with slight chamber to barrel misalignment? Do you install a bolt guide before you attempt to set timing? Do you install an action stop? Just askin on account of the tremendous amount of knowledge that you seem to have on a platform you don't understand.
Ever hear of bullet distortion from angular misalignment ! An angular misaligned cylinder chamber with the bore has the same effect as a angular misaligned chamber in a rifle barrel. It launches the projectile out of square to the bore and when it hits the forcing cone it distorts it's shape. Angle cutting the forcing cone has the same effect introducing the bullet to the bore and hence is equally useless.
A revolver can at timers shoot good groups to 25 yards and on occasion to 50 with balls but beyond both angular and co-axial misalignment begins to show up with conicals.
With bullets you will often be able to detect tipping on target.
The reason custom revolvers are occasionally capable of MOA accuracy at 100 yards is because of bore align reaming of the chambers insuring perfect chamber/bore alignment angular and on x-y axis.
 
I see, and how many people can shoot the difference? I see you haven't answered my earlier questions, I think that most of these replica revolvers are held to close enough tolerances that all that techno spew you came up with really isn't a factor. If I had to worry about all that stuff you mentioned I couldn't turn one out for less than a 1000.00 just in labor alone. I check the ones that come through my shop with a rod sized to fit the bore for the purpose of checking alignment of chambers to the bore. A small misalignment can be compensated for. So far the only really bad ones I have seen were from Palmetto and Armi San Paolo. I must have the worlds oddest Ruger Old Army on account of having rough chambers and a sewer pipe bore it still flings a 200 grn semi wadcutter minute of jackrabbit at 75 yards.
 
Mr Smokerr, not at all surprised on the Rugers, they like dropping the bolt early I think to prevent throw by. The bolt is acting like a brake in addition to the hand doing likewise. There is a fix but it's not for the faint of heart as one little stroke of a file too much and your gonna be buying parts. It always puzzled me as to why Ruger would even bother with lead in cuts on the cylinder when the bolt drop is so far from the locking notches.
 
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