When I got the rifle it was so caked in dried oil or lube that you couldn’t tell if it had rifling in the barrel and a lot of it had ran down the comb on the stock that it looked like rot on the wood. Cleaned the stock with Go-Jo hand cleaner back down to the original finish and stopped there. Scrubbed the barrel and soaked it with Ballistol several times until finally could tell it still had riflings. Turned out to be .30 cal. Got to shoot it 3 times and the bridle came apart in 2 places from what looked to be a hundred yr old repair. Sent the lock off to be repaired and waited 7 months for them to tell me they didn’t want to do the work. When I got the lock back I decided it wasn’t any good like it was and did the work myself. Had the bridle wire welded back together and filed it back in shape and repaired the sear. Pretty proud of the rifle at this point.What all did you do to it? It looks like a really nice rifle. I’d like to see more pictures of it.
Let us know how it turns out. Are you gonna hunt with it or just shoot targets?
Bridle was broken in 3 pieces. Wire welded it back together and filed back to shape and drilled new pivot hole. Used all original screws to put it back together. Only thing not original to rifle is the hammer screw and the main spring.Great work. Next time you clean it could you take a picture of your lock repair? Thanks.
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