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February 20th, 2008, 15:12 | #1 |
Revolver Cycling weakness
Hello all.
I'm experiencing some cylinder-cycling problem on my 357: the pistol is mint condition, O rings are brand new and it's oiled everywhere. on some shots, the cylinder doesn't cycle completely and ends up halfway between 2 slots. Gas goes poofff, BB doesn't go anywhere and cycling is messed up. This happens only using double-action, usually the third or fourth shot in the cylinder. this double action feels a bit weak. Simple action is perfect, but I jammed it once, again for some weird cycling reason. Any revolver doctor here? thanks!
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February 20th, 2008, 15:47 | #2 |
Prancercise Guru
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It's all mechanical on the revolvers I've handled. Check the teeth on the cylinder and the stop. The mechanism inside the frame could be causing this but I don't know if you want to dig into that.
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February 20th, 2008, 16:31 | #3 | |
Quote:
teeth are ok, but what if the pressuring part on those teeth don't pressure hard enough? I'm probably going to tighten the spring that links trigger and cylinder rotator. anyone to stop me?
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February 20th, 2008, 16:44 | #4 |
Prancercise Guru
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There's a nice shot of a typical real steel and I'm sure if someone searches there will be Gas powered cutaways too. It sounds like a pawl or ratchet is damaged and wear could be visible, or it could be minor and you'd need an undamaged item to compare to so you can notice the fault.
http://science.howstuffworks.com/revolver2.htm |
February 20th, 2008, 16:49 | #5 | |
oooh nice, danke Danke.
Quote:
apparently the pawl doesn't do its job properly.
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Last edited by Jimski; February 20th, 2008 at 16:54.. |
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February 23rd, 2008, 12:26 | #6 |
ok, I found the problem for real.
It's the fact that two of the 6 fake bullets/real chambers are not working properly: these parts are supposed to be pushed in the cylinder at firing time, to ensure proper air-seal;The two faulty chambers are just a little harder to push in. The cylinder system is not strong enough, and jams halfway. Weirdly, the parts are exactly the same and don't seem to have any defect. I'm gonna try sand-papering them just a tad, on the tip,to see if the 'push' gets easier. or pre-compress the spring a little bit? I really don't know. Hope this will eventually help some revolver-guy. Jim
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February 24th, 2008, 02:36 | #7 |
Prancercise Guru
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Can you swap various parts around? Cartridges in cylinders or insides of cartridges? Sometimes you can get tolerances conflicting, let me see if I can explain.
The limit when they make the parts is +/-.005 for discusions sake. If you mix two parts that are the + or - side you can exceed the allowed limit. It's not something you can tell by eye, you need something like a go/no go gauge to find the problems. |
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