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Legacy Member
If it doesn't shoot, would it be worthwhile having the barrel re-lined?
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12-31-2017 10:52 AM
# ADS
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Patrick Chadwick
Oil the wood with linseed mixed with REAL turpentine
Also a trick used to get stains into a very hard wood...thinning it...
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Thanks everyone for advices and ideas. Took the time over the past two weeks to do two things:
1. Spend the first week of the holidays fighting a cold, and
2. Spend some time during the second week to work on this rifle!
Things went rather well, but it took time. I cleaned each part individually. From the extractor retaining screw to the front volley sight arm, not forgetting the rear sight leaf spring retaining screw
Everything was taken apart and cleaned.
The repair of the forend, around the trigger guard, went well too. I had to replace one small piece (probably 1/2" long), but it's now solid enough and should last a few decades.
From inside:

From outside, stained:

The bore was bad. Really bad. My normal cleaning rod (which usually goes through a .22 bore without a glitch) initially got stuck in the bore, because there wasn't enough clearance. So I began by plugging the muzzle and filling the bore with a de-rusting solution, which opened things up a bit. Then, I switched to bore cleaner (filled up the bore for a few hours as well). After a few hours of brushing, there was some rifling visible! And pitting. There is pitting in there, we can't really avoid this.

But, you know what? It shoots well enough to say: it's alive!





Further more, testing it in my backyard with CCI "quiet" .22 shorts (because neighbours and so forth), I am very happy to report that, at about 25 yards, we have rasonable grouping!
My "backyard range" (target is in the middle, behind the bird feeder - not the one on the right)


That was a great, fun project.
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The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to louthepou For This Useful Post:
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Advisory Panel
I've seen ratty bores shoot before...worst case you can line it.
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Great to see the results Louis. Hard to believe that after it's long luxurious soak that it turned out as well as it did.
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Contributing Member
A Phoenix really did rise from the ashes great job......
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Deceased August 31st, 2020
I note that the soaking in the creek raised all of the dents and dings in the woodwork.
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Legacy Member
The history of how it ended up in that creek would just be fascinating. I bet with more scrubbing it will shoot fine. Hell it's not doing bad now.
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Advisory Panel
A wonderful piece of work, Louis!
A word of caution: any roughness in the bore will tend to strip off lead from the bullets.
May I therefore suggest that you follow the method I used for the "pickelgewehr" (see thread). Drive a lead slug (from a dismantled .22 round) through the bore, starting from the breech end. Measure the bore diameter (the smallest value you see when you rotate the slug in the jaws of a micrometer) and then turn up a brass slug to this diameter, less about 0.002"***, with a "driving band" in the middle that is about 0.010" larger in diameter and about 1/16" wide. Drive this through the well-oiled barrel, again from the breech end, using a yard length of brass rod as a driver that will not harm the bore. This drive out some hard rust from the grooves, saving save you hours of work with the bronze brush, and also produce a v. slight honing effect that will let the bullets slide through the bore without being ripped up.
*** It is vital that the slug cannot jam in the bore.
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Thank You to Patrick Chadwick For This Useful Post:
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Originally Posted by
Patrick Chadwick
A wonderful piece of work, Louis!
A word of caution: any roughness in the bore will tend to strip off lead from the bullets.
May I therefore suggest that you follow the method I used for the "pickelgewehr" (see thread). Drive a lead slug (from a dismantled .22 round) through the bore, starting from the breech end. Measure the bore diameter (the smallest value you see when you rotate the slug in the jaws of a micrometer) and then turn up a brass slug to this diameter, less about 0.002"***, with a "driving band" in the middle that is about 0.010" larger in diameter and about 1/16" wide. Drive this through the well-oiled barrel, again from the breech end, using a yard length of brass rod as a driver that will not harm the bore. This drive out some hard rust from the grooves, saving save you hours of work with the bronze brush, and also produce a v. slight honing effect that will let the bullets slide through the bore without being ripped up.
*** It is vital that the slug cannot jam in the bore.
That sounds like a brilliant idea. I was thinking of shooting a few copper-jacketed .22 bullets through, but your method sounds more appropriate... (albeit it does involve more work too!)
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