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Argentino M1879 Rolling Block. Is it worth restoring?
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11-08-2010 10:07 PM
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Remington Rolling Block in 11mm from South America
Attachment 16962Attachment 16963I found a Remington rolling block that was also in a basement, been there for years, was in NRA "poor" condition at best! There was very little that you could salvage besides the action.
I cut the original barrel off at ten inches, than bored it out to 1/2 inch, than used a 22 rim rife barrel blank and turned down the last 10 inches to 1/2 in o.d. to make a sleeve plus a hardened bushing at the rear. I bent the lower tang and made a new trigger with a sear to provide a very nice trigger pull. I also installed a rim fire bushing in the breech (could be removed) and an extractor was made from round stock for the rim fire cartridge. I cut down the hammer and made the scope blocks for a Lyman 438 scope. I made the stock and fore-end from a Calif walnut blank and sent the action out for case colors.
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RCS,
Very nice work!
That’s some impressive gunsmithing.
Your skills and imagination are far beyond mine.
My goal, if I obtain this rifle would be to restore the wood and metal back to original or at least as close as possible. Mechanically it has issues and will never be a shooter unless a new (or newer barrel) is installed.
I have very little restoration experience so this could be a good second project.
My first milsurp project was a Swedish Mauser that Bubba chain sawed off the forearm.
I figured the wood was already ruined, so I could do no harm.
Here’s a before photo. All I did was to carefully clean up the action and refinish the stock with Tung Oil.
I actually miss that old beat up deep dark patina. Sorry no after pictures.
Patrick,
I’m a “Hippocratic Oath” kind of guy when it comes to old rifles.
I would only proceed with what you guys suggest as acceptable restoration techniques.
I look forward to learning the best procedures for restoring the metal finishes.
Pay Day is Monday so we’ll see then??? If the guy will take $50 for it I’ll get it.
Hopefully more pictures then.
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Advisory Panel
Good luck!
If you get it, we'll start with checking out how bad the barrel really is - I have had black and pitted barrels that turned out well, and shiny barrels that were useless. So don't assume it's junk too soon.
Patrick
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rolling block rifle
Like Patrick Chadwick said, check out the bore, than find out which 11mm cartridge it is chambered for - lot of people reload these cartridges and there are nice bullet moulds or you can buy bullets. I once made a cylindrical bullet mould for paper patch bullets. You could always have a barrel liner installed to a smaller calibre such as 32-40 or 38-55 too and keep the rifles profile - but you might need to have a bushing for a smaller firing pin.
The rolling blocks have really bad trigger pulls and making the mainspring lighter is not a
good correction, there was a company in Texas that made Rem rolling block rifles for target shooting and these had double set triggers, Remington also made a single set trigger back in the 1870's too
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Advisory Panel
The Model 1879 Argentine Rolling Block was chambered for the .43 Spanish cartridge.
Components should be readily available from reloading suppliers. Lee even offers a Pacesetter die set. Easier and cheaper to feed than my Egyptian!
And the frozen backsight can be unfrozen without brute force. The V on the sight leaf looks very crisp, so I think the sight will turn out well.
The wood can be freshened without being chemically hammered into submission.
The weak hammer action is probably simply the result of the action being full of fossilized muck. Could be a weak spring, but plain muck is more likely.
When I got my Martini Henry the firing pin would not have squashed a paper bag - it just crept up to the block. After cleaning out the "yakolene" it now works perfectly. So you may be lucky too.
It's the bore condition that is the real question. Contrary to received wisdom, just looking down the bore will often not be enough to make a judgement. I have learnt not to trust my eyes alone.
Go and get it, and report back!
Patrick
Last edited by Patrick Chadwick; 11-09-2010 at 07:41 PM.
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I agree with Patrick. While rough, the rifle is certainly in a condition that will allow restoration to acceptable condition, especially if the bore is shootable. Why trash it by re-barreling or a total polish and refinish? The Argentine rifles are no longer in the "cheap" or "junk" category like they were 30 or 40 years ago.
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If you are going to restore it, keep checking e-pay and gunbroker for parts and barrels (if the barrel is bad). The action alone is worth $100-$150.
john
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Last edited by Patrick Chadwick; 12-29-2021 at 11:53 AM.
Reason: Pictures restored
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