Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Three Boot Pistols, .31 caliber

Here are a couple of really crude boot pistols. Both use pieces of a single Enfield DP .303 barrel.


Pistol #2
This one is the second of this series, it came out a bit better than the first one.
The barrel takes a .310 round ball without a patch. I have found some .315 round balls at Cabela's.

Yup, it is a bit small. Frame is 1/2 inch square tubing. Barrel is the last piece, the front. Lock is patterned after a very popular lock style. Nipple is a bit tall and may get replaced with a revolver type of nipple.




Left side of #2.
Cherry Stock, unfinished.  No sights, yet. Trigger surface has been polished for a nice pull.




Left side of the lock.  No half-cock, yet.  Shows the trigger spring which is captive by short holes in the trigger and frame.  Hammer head is left large until the barrel is attached. The hammer head will soon be shrunk and the tail may get curled up. A 6-32 button head screw holds the hammer spring to the frame. Hammer and trigger are from 3/16 inch thick stock.


Rear, angled view of the right side.













Added: Front sight, other part of that 5cents, LIBERTY * 1964
Added: Flash cup on hammer, .308 win brass.















APR/04/2014
New Walnut Grip.








Range Report 4/4/2014
.310 round ball, 30gr of 777 FFFg,
no patch, 11 meters. No rear sight.
At least it hit the target!


















Pistol #1
Walnut burl for the grip. Longer barrel, the middle piece, still .303 Enfield.







 Lock, with hammer cup, 10mm Brass.
5cents, 1964, Nose & Chin.










 At rest.
 Half cock.
Full cock.










Added: Brass face to the trigger, rear sight.
Barrel now riveted with 3/16 inch rod.














Added: #3 in a "family" shot.
It is a .40 cal smooth bore.  Barrel is a Carcano piece drilled to .395 inches.  Ramrod has .223 brass case as a tip.
Grip is Walnut Burl.













Range Report from May/07/2014
11M, .375 RB, 15gr of 777 FFFg, Red Ticking Patch lubed with Bore Butter.
Since there is no rear sight, it hit a bit to the right, need to fix that.



















IdeZilla

Comments appreciated.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Rear Sight Changed

Feb/13/2014
The rear sight has been changed to this newer one.

The old sight was removed from the top brass strip and replaced with this one.  This sight is a bit fragile and this pistol will need it's own storage case for protection.

Each 1/4 turn of the thumb nut moves the sight tube up or down 0.0078125 inch.















Close up from the left side.
Base was modified to allow further downward movement (notched) to simulate the older sight tube.  The base was then soft soldered to the top strip.
 Right side view.
Top view.
The screw slot on the left is oval to allow for windage adjustments.
How it looks to the shooter.
Everything is in alignment vertically but the may not be.(Maybe it is now)

What you cannot see is that the top brass strip is adjustable for windage. There is a small "notch" that matches at the back of the frame and brass piece.

IdeZilla

Comments are welcomed.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Prototype Rear Sights

I started playing with some pieces of brass tubing and 22MAG brass.
I came up with this rear type of sight with elevation only.
Brass tubing attached to the base with a 6-32 US thread screw in the center.
A spring surrounds that base tube and pushes up on the slider tube.
The slider can move up or down about 1/4 inch.
The thumb nut pushes the slider down against the spring, hopefully holding it in place.
The loop keeps the 22MAG peep tube pointing forward.



Left Side, Full Up Position.












Left Side, Full Down Position












Left Rear, Full Down Position

Left Rear, Full Up Position












Rear View, through the 22MAG case, as a rear peep sight.














Pulling down on the slider spring shows the inner base tube.

IdeZilla

Reminds me of Steam Punk stuff.














Feb/12/2014
Here is another one, this is fun.
This sight has been designed to fit at the rear of  "Underhammer Pistol, in progress".

Rear View.
It needs a lot of cleaning and polishing, it is rough.
Slider is positioned a bit higher, near the top of movement.








Here are the pieces.

Sight tube is a 22MAG brass that was picked up at the shooting range. Screw is 6-32 US thread.
Slider tube is larger than base tube. Base tube and slider tubes are soldered with low temperature silver plumbers solder, the rest with soft solder. Spring came from an assortment box from the hardware store.

The reason for the curly sight tube arm is for small bending amounts to align this sight tube to the front sight.








Front - Left Side View.
Sight tube is almost at the bottom of its movement.
Rear - Left Side View.
There is room for tick marks on the outside of the slide guide panel.















Feb/15/2014
Here is number three, this should be all for a while.
 Rear View.
Front View.
















Sept/9/2014
#4
.22 MAG brass for sight tube.
6-32 US screw for adjustment.














































IdeZilla

Comments are welcomed.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Brass Rear Sight Up Close

Here is that brass rear sight up close.
Not much text just pictures.
Yes, the tang is removable.

All Pieces.
 Lead (63/37) Soldered to tang.
Slider guides are soldered to sight frame.
6-32 US screw.
Solder showing on the rear frame guide.
 Screw flush with rear of sight frame
 Solder showing on the two frame guides.
 Slight dovetail on rear sight guide.
 Sliding piece

 Slight dovetail on sliding piece
 Approximately 90 degrees for slider
 Approximately 90 degrees for frame
Thumb Nut and Washer exert pressure on slider holding it into the rear dovetail. Thumb Nut purchased at hardware store.
Sight to stock clearance.

IdeZilla, Feb/6/2014

Comments Welcomed.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

BHP #6 Upgraded, UnderHammer.

Here is one of the first rifles I made that used to be on www.garagegunsmithing.com (a dead site, too bad)
It consists of a DOM (Drawn Over Mandrel, no welds or seams) 1 inch barrel with a .50 inch bore.
Barrel Cost is about $1 US per inch.
A walnut stock, a free reject, from a website that sells better ones for $35.00 US.


Underhammer action with a floating trigger guard which is only held at the rear, behind the trigger.
Shown at half-cock.
Scope is 32x4, inexpensive of course.
This smooth bore barrel is surprisingly accurate, hits whatever you aim at.
Front wood stock is held in place (by friction) with two brass bands having two screws at the bottom face through the wood.


A closer view.










How the scope rail is mounted, on two separate blocks soldered to the barrel. Barrel is held in place with those two 10-32 US thread button-head screws right behind the barrel.  I suppose that if another caliber was wanted the barrel could be removed and replaced.







A closer view of the trigger guard. The action is a teeter-totter type, a separate sear. Those two visible stock screws (top right edge of picture) also hold the trigger guard in place.  Somehow the camera reports the trigger as rusted, not true.

IdeZilla






Feb/20/2014
25 yds, .490 RB, 50gr FFFg (777), blue ticking patch.
Top target was for sighting the scope.  Bottom target was for testing the scope.






















IdeZilla

Comments Welcomed