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the other "project"
I am afraid I lied -
I said there another "project", and there is almost nothing to do to this one. I was told all sorts of issues. I was planning to take the 10 bore Clabrough out to defend a friend's hunting property against an onslaught of geese, If I have the time this weekend to fix the one actual problem, this may go along. - The right lock needs a little jiggle to cock, I have seen this before on flintlocks, dirt or a burr in the notch may be all it is. On the Clabrough, it was simply a slight bend in the trigger tab where it met the sear arm. This piece matches the letter perfectly - 9lbs on the nose - 32" barrels on a #2 frame, not that much drop, I put one of those thin neoprene velco pads on it and it fits fine. I don't have a 10 ga bore gauge - but when I stick the 12 one down the tubes, it goes to its max reading. From there, I find the right barrel only compresses it a few thous, but the left presses in quite a bit. the letter shows a much lighter shot concentration in the right Vs the left tube. I have not found anything on Mr Armstrong yet, but I just started, I am guessing he saw a marsh or two over this rib. The bores have modest coverage of light pitting and good thick walls if I decide to polish them at all. The outside has no rust, and I can see some nice figure in the twist under the patina. And they ring like the proverbial church bells. Someone had rapped the left lock plate a few times with something hard, maybe to seat it, and left some tiny dents. From the original pictures, I had planned to have the filled by TIG welding and the plate redressed, but in person, they aren't that bad. So I may wait to see how much they bother me. :rolleyes: And the repro buttplate is too small - I'll get some careful measurements and order a better fit. The hammer screws are new. so here it is - http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...psde60d88a.jpg http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...pseb68c65d.jpg http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...ps092a5d13.jpg http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...psd535d4f5.jpg http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...psa0015fbb.jpg http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...ps15596222.jpg never had a fishtail - that was a selling point http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...psf3a050b5.jpg decent wood that needs a refinish, a very minor chip in the toe http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...pse67d2539.jpg the undersized buttplate http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...psa275941e.jpg the dents http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...ps5f8ef0ce.jpg |
very nice goose gun you got there...i think it s gona make a great gunlooks like its ready to go now...charlie
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That looks like one I recently bought, except mine has a few real issues and does not have the fishtail toplever.
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ok - except for the cosmetic refinishing
the actual gunsmithing on this project is done had a few minutes during lunch, so I took the locks off and trigger set out out - the right lock cocks fine so on to the triggers :corn: turns out, the front trigger, especially the upper tab, had so much petrified oil on it that trigger could not return to the full resting position so, I took the assembly apart, scrubbed everything clean, ran some folded 400 grit paper in the trigger slots, took a needle file to a couple burrs and - reassembled - now everything works perfectly. :draw: nice smooth triggers, no need to tap on it to seat that marked up lock now with the dirt removed. surprising the wood in there look pretty good- i will still go through the oil removal process before refinishing . |
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