Gooddaytoya!
40 Cal
It's the metal part that soldered to the barrel of half-stock rifles that holds short tubes so you can load a ramrod just under the barrel. I had to resolder It and it was a bear of the job.
Per your EXACT description - you are referring to the under rib. Some shotguns also have one on top of the barrel and it is referred to as the sight rib.It's the metal part that soldered to the barrel of half-stock rifles that holds short tubes so you can load a ramrod just under the barrel. I had to resolder It and it was a bear of the job.
Thanks guys.
By the way, I modified the picture to make it show the parts more plainly, which also made the barrel look like it's totally rusty. It's not, but it does need refinishing.Thanks guys.
There are different names for these here in the UK they are known has the the ramrod rib and and the ramrod pipe . Soldering the ribs is easy and straight forward especially on the octangle type of barrel the round barrel is more complicated you must position the rib true centre tin them und wire the rib in place and solder .It's the metal part that soldered to the barrel of half-stock rifles that holds short tubes so you can load a ramrod just under the barrel. I had to resolder It and it was a bear of the job.View attachment 98659
There are different names for these here in the UK they are known has the the ramrod rib and and the ramrod pipe...
. Soldering the ribs is easy and straight forward
Feltwad
NO!!! The patina gives it character! And the muzzleloading crowd loves characters!By the way, I modified the picture to make it show the parts more plainly, which also made the barrel look like it's totally rusty. It's not, but it does need refinishing.
Yes if you know what you're doing. Now that I've soldered it, I learned on my own essentially what you said. Next time I plan to tin several spots on the rib and the barrel, then flatten out a piece of 35/75 rosin core solder to about a little less than 1/16 of an inch, slice it into appropriate size rectangles and paint my favorite flux on those spots, place the solder, then fasten the rib to the barrel with light duty c clamps, then heat the entire barrel to 380° using my non-contact thermometer to get the heat just right. That should do it do you agree?. Soldering the ribs is easy and straight forward
Feltwad
Enter your email address to join: