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How did they do that
How did Parker put those ribbons around the bolsters on high grades? Were there different castings for these guns? Does anyone have anything on the actual process Parker used to get this feature on these graded guns. I know you can weld them up and fake them and I am thinking Parker did not use this method. I am Just curious if anyone knows what Parker actually did. Educate me please.
Patrick |
I believe I had read that the ribbons or 'beads' were filed into a standard frame casting.
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The raw frames had enough metal to file them in.
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Thankyou Patrick |
Based on the time of Patrick's last post, I think this question is keeping him
up at night! Help please!! |
1 Attachment(s)
This raw casting is pictured in TPS. I do not know of any others out there. But this woild be before any machining.
Attachment 58387 |
1 Attachment(s)
If they were anything like the fox frames, there was a good amount of metal left once the hand took over from the machine.
Attachment 58388 |
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Patrick |
Patrick, the various sizes of frames were all cast from the same moulds, specific to the frame size. All frames had the same amount of steel at the rear of the bolsters. Grades 4 and down only needed to be finish-shaped and polished while Grades 5 and higher had metal filed away while the single, double and triple beads were created.
A sculptor REMOVES marble to finally expose the beautiful form within. Same process as exposing the beads. . |
Very similar to carving a duck decoy - you take a block of wood and cut away anything that doesn't look like a duck.
I guess the next question would be how much weight was removed carving beads on the bolsters; e.g., do higher grade guns weigh proportionally less than lower grades due to the amount of metal removed? |
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