I had seen Blackie's "arbor fix" before but wanted to refresh my memory so I found it.
Blackie's idea of a split washer being a fix is fine for him but it's the JB Weld probably doing more than the "single coil spring" ( split washer which will flex under compression).
He's not referencing a specific endshake number so he's fine thinking he did something. I've heard others "hawking" the split washer fix and it's just not an acceptable solution for me and my customers. It would be nice if a "one size fits all" spacer would work but it won't. Every spacer I install is fitted to that specific revolver. If I go too far and make one a little thin, I keep it because it will be a good fit or start for another revolver one day.
His idea of the wedge being sacrificial isn't really right because a corrected revolver isn't detrimental to the wedge . . . a loose fitting wedge ( finger tight, uncorrected arbor) is detrimental to the wedge.
But hey, if that's what some think is the right thing for their revolvers, it's they're revolvers!! I've laid out my thoughts, my process and it has proven over time and through competition to be a bullet proof setup. So, I'll keep doing it my way and I'll be happy to help whoever wants to do the same.
Mike
Blackie's idea of a split washer being a fix is fine for him but it's the JB Weld probably doing more than the "single coil spring" ( split washer which will flex under compression).
He's not referencing a specific endshake number so he's fine thinking he did something. I've heard others "hawking" the split washer fix and it's just not an acceptable solution for me and my customers. It would be nice if a "one size fits all" spacer would work but it won't. Every spacer I install is fitted to that specific revolver. If I go too far and make one a little thin, I keep it because it will be a good fit or start for another revolver one day.
His idea of the wedge being sacrificial isn't really right because a corrected revolver isn't detrimental to the wedge . . . a loose fitting wedge ( finger tight, uncorrected arbor) is detrimental to the wedge.
But hey, if that's what some think is the right thing for their revolvers, it's they're revolvers!! I've laid out my thoughts, my process and it has proven over time and through competition to be a bullet proof setup. So, I'll keep doing it my way and I'll be happy to help whoever wants to do the same.
Mike