lonehunter said:pardon my ignorance, but how would one cone the inside of a vent if it was just a hole in the barrel?? is there a tool for this? if so, how does it work? :v
texcl said:Yes there is,it is a little flat piece of hardened steel that has the cone shaped cutting surface on one end and a touch hole sized nub on the other, it is inserted inside the barrel through the touch hole while it is unbreached and a drill is then chucked to the nub that sticks out of the touch hole,and you cut the cone out. I'm sure someone else here can explain it better with pics., it is really simple.
AK Mike said:This was on the Caywood Guns website, I've never heard of this before. Anyone see it happen before?
Please be advised that installation of a touch-hole liner will void any and all warranties. We cannot work on a barrel which has a touch-hole liner. The only solution to any problem encountered will be to replace the barrel. Touch-hole liners are unnecessary and they ARE DANGEROUS. After years of use, with gas erosion and replacement-removal wear, the threads will no longer hold the liner in the barrel and it WILL BECOME A PROJECTILE WHICH CAN KILL OR MAIM A BYSTANDER. Your gun will not ignite faster with a touch-hole liner. A properly coned touch-hole will ignite almost instantaneously without any problems that are associated with liners. Please be advised not to stand next to any shooter using a touch-hole liner in any gun.
English gold liners were but in like a rivet, there are no threads what so ever.DennisA said:Yes I am aware of how liners were made and of what material in English "Best" guns. The comparison is not a stretch. A liner is a liner whether it is screwed in place or brazed. The point being that liners while seen as a feature on a new British gun. Was not commonly found on a new gun made in the Americas it was however a means of repairing a gun whose vent had become enlarged.
Va.Manuf.06 said:hank said:Flint, one of the guys at our club actually had a nipple blow out of the bolster on his CVA Kentuckian, it turned out he was in the habit of removing it at every cleaning, and had worn the threads..no one got hurt..and I agree, Caywood is involved in some kind of CYA...Hank
Dollars to donuts he cross threaded it and damaged the threads in the bolster - that is what caused the problem, not removing the nipple. It is common practice to remove the nipple every time you clean a percussion gun and will not cause a problem if it is screwed back in properly. Cross thread it and you have ruined it and all bets are off. As far as a touch hole liner? Like Paul said, I wouldn't remove one, it won't be a problem.
This has happened locally about 15 years ago with a centermark TVLLE. It involved lots of beer and a massive overload. Blew out the 1/4" X 28 liner and took the lock out with it completely destroying the stock. The barrel seemed to be otherwise unharmed. The shooter was also unharmed which seems to be typical luck of drunks.....Sir Michael said:I'm hard pressed to understand how a touch hole liner can become projectile. I've never seen one that is fully exposed. All of the liners I've seen are between 30-50% covered by the lock pan. For one of these to be blown out would require sufficient force to shear the liner length wise leaving the remaining part captured under the lock pan. :shocked2: Or it might blow the whole lock off which I sincerely doubt is possible even for one with a single lock bolt. :hmm:
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