JB White
05-09-2018, 01:40
Much longer posting than normal for me, but I want to give you as much detail as possible without writing a book or making a boring 20 minute video.
A few years ago I was gifted a nice looking but not so perfectly operating "Remington Outlaw" in 45 Colt. It came to me in a Navy Arms repair box but no ticket to see what NA might have done. I have good reason to think it was for a hammer nose replacement and I'll get into the reasoning in a bit.
It checked out so-so/OK so I fired it. I ignored the slightly "gritty feeling" action but later experienced a cylinder bind/hang up. The heavy hammer made my thumb raw in short order as well. Cleaned it and set it aside until last week. Almost forgot I had it. Time to get it going....
1. FP hole was cratered outward at the bottom edge. (grabbing the spent primers?)
2. Hammer nose retaining pin was proud and dragging the frame.
I suspect dry firing and a broken nose, thus the NA repair. I shaved the proud metal inside the frame opening and addressed the ragged peening on the nose retaining pin. While I had the gun apart I addressed any other drag marks. Action smoothed up nicely...but that heavy, black powder, percussion cap smashing, mainspring had to go.
*** Keep in mind I had no reason to touch any notches. Those looked good as-is. ***
Looked up VTI for 1875 Uberti-Remington parts. Bought their lightened mainspring and a spare bolt/sear spring which was listed as a factory replacement. The bolt spring was a bust. Compared to my factory spring (Colt-like arched flat dual spring) this new one was a recurve design. It didn't operate the bolt properly, so I set it aside and finished reassembly with the origin factory flat spring. Had to shim a little below the new mainspring to keep the hammer bearing from slipping off, but it wasn't a problem.
Lo and behold! This thing cycled like a tuned Blackhawk aside from the number of clicks. No more AD thumb slips either when decocking. I was just feeling proud of my work until I checked the letoff. Kind of light for my liking so out came the trigger scale. Barely one pound??? Dang it. I should have checked it before just to know, but I know it wasn't THAT light.
Opened it up and dinked and putzed for a little looking things over then remembered I had that spare spring. Figured a little bending might make it work (forget about sending it back...I'm in trouble shooting mode now!). Out came the torch...
Took three tries before I got it shaped and balanced to work and it is working now. Nice solid lockup at full cock and the cylinder bolt is timed nicely. BUT...I only gained half a pound or so. It's still too light for my liking as I prefer a 3# SA trigger. I can live with the plus side of 2# if I had to.
1.5 pounds even if it's a solid,break-glass letoff is too touchy for a weekend out with others. I wish I had measured the trigger pull before all this. I may be in the ballpark for all I know and the dragging only made things feel otherwise.
So, there is my problem. Aside from going back to a 4,000# factory mainspring (I exaggerated...sue me) is there a practical way to get the poundage up on the trigger? I feel as though I'm overlooking something simple. Any tips trick or lectures? Thanks.
I'm going to post this...then put back both factory springs and put the trigger scale to it. Try again. :eusa_whistle:
A few years ago I was gifted a nice looking but not so perfectly operating "Remington Outlaw" in 45 Colt. It came to me in a Navy Arms repair box but no ticket to see what NA might have done. I have good reason to think it was for a hammer nose replacement and I'll get into the reasoning in a bit.
It checked out so-so/OK so I fired it. I ignored the slightly "gritty feeling" action but later experienced a cylinder bind/hang up. The heavy hammer made my thumb raw in short order as well. Cleaned it and set it aside until last week. Almost forgot I had it. Time to get it going....
1. FP hole was cratered outward at the bottom edge. (grabbing the spent primers?)
2. Hammer nose retaining pin was proud and dragging the frame.
I suspect dry firing and a broken nose, thus the NA repair. I shaved the proud metal inside the frame opening and addressed the ragged peening on the nose retaining pin. While I had the gun apart I addressed any other drag marks. Action smoothed up nicely...but that heavy, black powder, percussion cap smashing, mainspring had to go.
*** Keep in mind I had no reason to touch any notches. Those looked good as-is. ***
Looked up VTI for 1875 Uberti-Remington parts. Bought their lightened mainspring and a spare bolt/sear spring which was listed as a factory replacement. The bolt spring was a bust. Compared to my factory spring (Colt-like arched flat dual spring) this new one was a recurve design. It didn't operate the bolt properly, so I set it aside and finished reassembly with the origin factory flat spring. Had to shim a little below the new mainspring to keep the hammer bearing from slipping off, but it wasn't a problem.
Lo and behold! This thing cycled like a tuned Blackhawk aside from the number of clicks. No more AD thumb slips either when decocking. I was just feeling proud of my work until I checked the letoff. Kind of light for my liking so out came the trigger scale. Barely one pound??? Dang it. I should have checked it before just to know, but I know it wasn't THAT light.
Opened it up and dinked and putzed for a little looking things over then remembered I had that spare spring. Figured a little bending might make it work (forget about sending it back...I'm in trouble shooting mode now!). Out came the torch...
Took three tries before I got it shaped and balanced to work and it is working now. Nice solid lockup at full cock and the cylinder bolt is timed nicely. BUT...I only gained half a pound or so. It's still too light for my liking as I prefer a 3# SA trigger. I can live with the plus side of 2# if I had to.
1.5 pounds even if it's a solid,break-glass letoff is too touchy for a weekend out with others. I wish I had measured the trigger pull before all this. I may be in the ballpark for all I know and the dragging only made things feel otherwise.
So, there is my problem. Aside from going back to a 4,000# factory mainspring (I exaggerated...sue me) is there a practical way to get the poundage up on the trigger? I feel as though I'm overlooking something simple. Any tips trick or lectures? Thanks.
I'm going to post this...then put back both factory springs and put the trigger scale to it. Try again. :eusa_whistle: