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Toolguy

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Posts posted by Toolguy

  1. Yes, that is usually the situation. When all chambers have late timing, the hand is probably too thin. A wider hand will make it lock up sooner. When one or two chambers are late and the rest are OK, it is usually the ratchets related to those chambers that are different from the others. In that case, you can peen the offending ones to make them wider towards the hand, or get a new extractor (with new ratchets on it).

     

    Working on the ratchets is the most fiddly part of revolver work. It's easy to mess them up so they don't work at all. It's best not to mess with them if at all possible unless you are already experienced at it. Experience is what you get right after you need it. Sometimes you can bend the hand inward (towards the center pin of the cylinder) slightly to advance the timing.

  2. The ejector rod doesn't have enough runout to matter. It's straighter than a lot of them.

     

    If there was a bulge in the crane barrel that was causing a problem, it would have a shiny spot where it was rubbing. You can smooth out the roughness on the crane barrel by holding the front part in a vise and using some fine emery cloth in a shoe shine manner on the crane barrel. I would go with 400 grit or finer.

  3. I like Jet the best. I have a bunch of Comp 1,2,and 3 and one Jet. I had the Safariland ones first and like them too, but they seem to wear out over time. Also, the Jet one seems to have a more positive latch and launches the ammo into the gun. I never could seem to find any more Jets. I'll use the Safari ones till they crap out. They are still working after 30+ years. Never had SL Variant, so don't  know anything about them.

  4. Try out the parts first. Sometimes they don't need to be fitted. If it doesn't work right, then see about getting help. I have since changed mine back to a 10 shot, trading back to the original parts. Ten shots are more fun than 6. Now I just need to figure out a 10 shot 627.

  5. Yes. Same yoke. All I have to do is trade cylinders. It's about a 2 minute changeover. I expect they are standardizing things between the 929 and 627. It would make sense to do that. Older ones might need more fitting.

     

    The cylinder isn't that much shorter. A full length 38 Special works fine with any (normal) bullet.

  6. I like to keep it simple. I shoot mostly As as fast as I can, and don't worry about how anyone else is doing. You're more likely to crash and burn trying to keep up with someone of a higher skill level. You can only accurately go as fast as YOUR current skill level. I'm nowhere near the top guys,  so just shoot my own game, and that's the best I'll do.

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