- Joined
- Jun 4, 2014
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Recently felt the urge to try a percussion revolver and ended up with a Lyman 1860 . I bought it used, sight unseen and thought when I received it, what an attractive revolver. It is in beautiful condition on the outside, however when I pull the hammer back there are problems.
Frequently, not every time, the hammer stops short of hitting the nipple when the trigger is pulled(sort of like half cock but not really). The trigger also seems very light. It will fire caps placed on the nipples but not consistantly, or without a couple of hits. There also seems to be somewhat excessive endplay in the cylinder.
It is date coded AC ('77) and I think was made by Armi San Paulo.
I am not really familiar with the inner workings of these revolvers, so the question is, does it seem an easy fix, or should I send it back?
Like I said, it is in near perfect shape on the outside, and I got it for a decent price, not great, but not bad. I bought it from a reputable source and don't think I would have a problem returning it, but there's the hassle and the postage.
Frequently, not every time, the hammer stops short of hitting the nipple when the trigger is pulled(sort of like half cock but not really). The trigger also seems very light. It will fire caps placed on the nipples but not consistantly, or without a couple of hits. There also seems to be somewhat excessive endplay in the cylinder.
It is date coded AC ('77) and I think was made by Armi San Paulo.
I am not really familiar with the inner workings of these revolvers, so the question is, does it seem an easy fix, or should I send it back?
Like I said, it is in near perfect shape on the outside, and I got it for a decent price, not great, but not bad. I bought it from a reputable source and don't think I would have a problem returning it, but there's the hassle and the postage.