This is why I never buy a gun through online auction sites. Have fun on your repairs. It will be a good learning piece.
Yeah, not the kind of thing I'd want to buy online unless you're buying specifically to have something to fix. Lots of warning signs.
I looked at this, to do what you're doing. In the listing "childs gun" or "boys rifle" made me hesitate. Keep us posted!
Haha, that's kind of what drew it to me, even though you know shenanigans have gone on to reach that point. Figured it'd be a good gun to teach black powder on.
The dimensions of the stock are pretty small, but it's still not a super light gun. The barrel is hefty, and the whole gun weighs 112.5 ozs, or 7.03lbs. Still not terrible for a young teen.
I wonder if you could rebuild the lock with L&R replacement parts, keeping the original plate?
I was gonna ask on here about that. See if anyone had ideas of what kind of parts might be available. I don't know a lot about locks, either antique or modern.
Are these things often one offs, or can a "family" of locks at least be feasible for parts swapping? A half cock notch would be nice to have.
I bought a mini lathe this winter, after having trouble making some parts for another project. Got it all set up, then work got busy again, and its been taking up space on my main workbench. I need to move it to a more permanent spot, so I can get back to work on my other guns. Since it's ready to go though, I tried working brass for the first time.
Had to modify a boring bar to be able to fit something so small, but it worked great. Ended up with a nice snug fit on the shaft, and now the tumbler clearance is more reasonable. Wonder if I shouldn't have made this out of steel. Bearing bronze would probably be good. I should probably get some assorted stock to have on hand.
With the refitted tumbler, I started on making a new sear spring. Not something I had tried before. When I purchased my lather, I bought a bunch of different kinds of round stock in various sizes, brass, aluminum, 12l14 steel, and some O-1 tool steel. O-1 might not be the best choice for springs, but it's the only thing I had on hand that can be heat treated to any effect.
First one I broke when trying to bend it. I don't have a forge, so was just using a propane torch to heat to orange. I have basically no experience forging things, so it didn't go so well. Didn't know how far I could push things, and worked it too cold. Just touching the anvil with the part sucks a bunch of heat out. Probably for the best, as I had a weak point at the transition to the screw eye anyway.
The second one started out better. I clamped the torch to my welding bench so I could work the metal under heat with needle nose pliers.
This one broke when I was trying to get it installed in the lock. I thought I had annealed it enough, but I probably just cooled in the air too quickly even with me feathering it with the torch for 5 minutes. It's that, or marks from the pliers added weak points. Or a combination. No experience once again.
Third try seems to have worked. I learned a lot from the first two attempts.
Been using a mini band saw (portable saw bolted to a "table"). Got a beat to heck one cheap off ebay, and added the table. The table gets held by my bench vise, so I don't need dedicated floor space. Works really really well for this kind of thing. Much more fun than a hacksaw at least.
After doing the first two, I discovered it's easiest to start out with the screw hole. Gives a nice frame of reference and is pretty easy to keep things square
Layout fluid is handy for tracing on.
After the bulk of the material is removed with the band saw, a bench grinder works well for thinning things down, and blending smooth transitions. Make sure to keep the part cool. A glass of water at the bench is useful. Details are cleaned up with files.
Found a pair of smooth pliers to not mar things, but didn't need to use them much. A tiny hammer, and a chunk of flatstock to serve as an "air anvil" gets most of the work done.
After the last go around, I didn't want to take any chances on the part being too hard. I have access to a glass kiln, which should be accurate enough for tempering. I stuck it in the oven for and hour at 785 F. The kiln seemed to fluctuate between 770-795 at that setting. Since I never hardened the part, it should end up decently soft. At the very least, it shouldn't break while trying to do the fitup.
Once soft, I was able to check the shape, and remove from the stock and clean things up.
If I were better at this, the part would be just about done. I heated the part to orange, quenched in some expired peanut oil, then tempered in the kiln for an hour at the same setting. After the quench, it was like glass. Files wouldn't touch it, so that seems to be working. An hour at 800ish should leave me with a final hardness in the mid to upper 40's Rockwell if charts on the internet about o-1 are to be believed. I should get myself some sort of tester.
It actually had to rebend, and reshape the thing 3 times. That's one good thing about O-1, supposedly you can heat treat it a bunch of times safely. I had to tweak things to get the proper geometry, and spring tension by bending and removing metal. First attempt didn't quite fit, second attempt fit but the spring was too strong and trigger pull was horrible even with things polished. Third time was the charm, and I got a very nice trigger pull.
Here it is installed. I really need to make a screw to replace that ugly modern zinc plated one. That can be another new first project. Never made a screw before.