alandsal
36 Cl.
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2022
- Messages
- 54
- Reaction score
- 18
Aluminium as they say in the Isles…Just out of curiousity ... What's the alloy? That would potentially make a huge difference. Zinc, copper, tin .. not so good.
Some have asked what is the alloy ? I think it looks like aluminum , magnet won’t stickHey Guys , I purchased this Italian made
Box Lock 45 cal. it has an alloy box , the
Gun looks like it’s well made tight and fit
tolerances . Some say , stay away from
these and I’ve heard others say they are
a good shooter . So which is it ? I’d like
some feed back . alandsalView attachment 124687View attachment 124688
YESThe hammer appears to be welded back together. The only way to find out if it is a shooter is to take it to the range and work with it. I bet you can make it shoot well. I wouldn't worry too much about the aluminum lock unless over a period of time the hammer bearing axle begins to wallow out the action. Even then it could be sleeved. Give it a work out and let us know what you think.
there greatHey Guys , I purchased this Italian made
Box Lock 45 cal. it has an alloy box , the
Gun looks like it’s well made tight and fit
tolerances . Some say , stay away from
these and I’ve heard others say they are
a good shooter . So which is it ? I’d like
some feed back . alandsalView attachment 124687View attachment 124688
Thanks , as soon as spring arrives here I will take it to the range and give it a good work out and let you folks know the outcome. AlandsalThe hammer appears to be welded back together. The only way to find out if it is a shooter is to take it to the range and work with it. I bet you can make it shoot well. I wouldn't worry too much about the aluminum lock unless over a period of time the hammer bearing axle begins to wallow out the action. Even then it could be sleeved. Give it a work out and let us know what you think.
I’m sure it will do fine .I had one of those .45 Wesson clones in the 1970's, and had no issues with mine.
Mine, however, is not yours - so as stated above, it would be best to shoot/clean yours to determine it's worth to you.
I hope it works out well for you.
I think it’s aluminumJust out of curiousity ... What's the alloy? That would potentially make a huge difference. Zinc, copper, tin .. not so good.
Yes I have opened the box and your right, no powder enter’s that area . From what I see , the breech plug is casted with the boxMy Bride has one of those. “Dart” was the maker. Great little gun- she shoots it a bunch. For what it’s worth, a magnet sticks to the box. It may not be great steel, but steel it is. And honestly, have you opened it? The box is just the lock- there’s no powder or anything in there. And the barrel is proofed.
Jay
I would definitely go with aluminum (that is, if decent aluminum alloy). We have a 20 ga. O/U with aluminum receiver and it's great. Brass I'd be more picky about. But a good quality brass alloy should work very well too. I don't know the story of brass alloys in firearms, but in brass musical instruments, the quality goes from excellent (including some Chinese) to dreadful (Chinese and virtually all Indian). The classic knock on brass for BP firerarms frames (particularly in revolvers) is that it doesn't stand up to repeated stress and higher pressure loads. But again, that depends on the quality of the brass and how you treat it.
I believe the metal is aluminum , and from what I can see is that the firing chamber and breech plug are of steel and where casted together , the box itself only contains the lock mechanism , no powder or residue appears in this area . The rifleUsually when some maker says "alloy" he implies Zinc alloy, like old toys were made of.
Get rid of this thing.
Now.
JKelly retirted metallurgist
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