An ignoramus ignoring, what an oxymoron!I am proud to be ignored by French Colonial. If he doesn't like what those of us say when we offer ways to fix these pistols ignore away.
I guess we're all too dumb to realize the advantages to professional tuning. Must just be imagining it.
For sure, the cheapest part of owning a boat is what you paid for it.or having a boat.
What a truly ignorant post. Reading the OP, he’s showing what needs to be done. Feel free to do it yourself, have someone do it, or leave it alone. Me, I’ve had Mike do all three of mine for me. I shot the Walker today. His work is a bargain and I’m sure DYager is the same.Here are all the things that are wrong with the (insert whatever) that you has been (working fine) for a couple of years now.
I can fix all of this for you for only (How much I want to stiff you for) a small price to pay for peace of mind.
I love it when these guys try to drum up business.
Shouldn't this be an advertisement?
So you admit you graduated to custom guns and yet you continued to spout your moronic nonsense about THESE custom guns? You contradicted yourselfYour right of course....
But I will say I have been extremely lucky when it comes to firearm purchases, I bought a Uberti High Wall when I first started shooting BPCR, in a very short amount of time I was out shooting guys with Shiloh Sharps (never a fan of Sharps anyway). I did graduate to custom guns later in pursuit of excellence however. Out of all the purchases I have made I have only been disappointed less than six times.
I bought a Uberti 1851 and it is a very nice gun, trigger is crisp and if the arbor is short I cannot detect it. My biggest complaint is the sights, but that is what is supposed to be on a Colt open top. It shoots very well with round ball all things considered, I cannot get conicals to shoot worth a darn however.
So I will let you guys continue, I hope the money you spend gives you some satisfaction.
WHAT.... then I'm not going.You can't take your money with you.
So why bother tuning a new in the box open top? Simple answer is most need work to be reliable shooters. Uberti suffers from the short arbor which has been beat on pretty hard in other threads. There is a certain individual on this forum that has been absolutely against what tuners do to improve these pistols. So in spite of this fellow I am gonna give a rundown on what is done during a typical tuning job.
First and foremost correct the arbor. It's a big deal on the large horse pistols as they can and do beat themselves into a paperweight. Arbor correction has been discussed in detail elsewhere.
Timing and install a bolt guide, a bolt guide is a piece if hardened steel that goes between the frame and the bolt/cylinder stop. It keeps the bolt head traveling in the same plane. In spite of another guys opinion you cannot get precision timing without a bolt guide.
Make and install music wire torsion springs for the bolt and trigger. These replace the flat combination spring which is prone to breakage.
Install a Ruger type plunger and spring for hand tension. Gets rid of the flat spring on the hand. I use a stainless steel plunger and spring. This setup is much more reliable and not prone to breakage.
Install an action shield and stop. Action shield prevents cap fragments from entering the revolver's innards and jamming the works. There are several ways to attach the shield to the hammer. The action stop is installed to prevent damage by limiting how far the hammer can travel at cylinder lockup. It's an important addition for the CAS and fast draw guys. It helps limit wear and over travel and breakage of internal parts
Cap post, This is a small finger that is installed in the hammer slot to prevent cap fragments from getting into the slot under the hammer. A lot of cap and ball revolvers will pull spent caps off the nipples on the cylinder and drop those pieces into the hammer slot. Cap post also deflects blow back gasses from the nipple. Case in point a pocket pistol that would blow the hammer back to the half cock notch. After the cap post was installed that issue was gone.
One of the optional things I offer is to chamfer the cylinder throats so the ball doesn't shave lead when loaded. I set up my revolvers with a.002 barrel to cylinder gap, those lead rings can and do lock up the cylinder. I prefer the ball to be swaged into place with no shaving of lead. I have yet to see any thing documented from Colt or Remington about shaving lead from a ball during loading. Again this is an option.
So there it is in a nutshell. For those of you that are interested this a brief rundown of things that can be done to improve these pistols. My major recommendation is fix the short arbor on the Ubertis. Pietta fixed it on their stuff but occasionally one slips through. For those of you that are new to this please take that fellow who is gonna be commenting on this in a negative way with a huge grain of salt, he does not understand the single action platform.
Let the discussion begin.
Ignore me too, French Colonial. You’re a moron and now people on this forum are aware. I love when someone opens their yap to confirm their stupidity. Make sure you continue to contradict yourself. It’s a good look.
Well JJ, it's funny how FC can whine and cry about it after HE called anybody that did tuning for an occupation a THIEF!! That's ok but a "moron"? ooooooh that's really bad!!!Don't understand why some people have to called other people names to get their point across
So, you didn't JUST call me a moron SPECIFICALLY ( since I'm the one that made ( and PROVED) that claim!!!) ???Ok, here is the deal
I started on this "moronic" rant against getting "improvements" done when one of these fixers made the assertions that an open top design was stronger than a Remington closed top design....now that is moronic. And I have been questioning because if someone will believe that what else are they wrong about.