-
Mle 1892 8mm Revolver (French) with Documentation
-
Thank You to jmoore For This Useful Post:
-
09-03-2012 10:18 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Legacy Member
That's a fantastic piece! Is this a revolver that was captured by a family member?
-
-
-
Originally Posted by
Anzac15
That's a fantastic piece! Is this a revolver that was captured by a family member?
It is nice, thanks! But, no, no family history for me. Lots of family involvement during the war, everthing from the Manhattan Project to bulldozing runways in the Pacific, but the only item that might have been aquired overseas is unprovable in origin. And probably best remains that way...
Had another Mle. 1892 but it wasn't as "pretty". It ended up being used as trading fodder, but it wasn't an action lightly undertaken. It probably had actually been fielded.
-
-
Advisory Panel
Originally Posted by
jmoore
It's had a range trip, but ammo isn't exactly common. Smooth if somewhat heavy double action pull. The trigger pull with the hammer cocked is nothing special, but it's quite adequate for a combat sidearm.
I have tested one of these revolvers that was ruined on the outside. No collector's showpiece!. But the mechanism was perfect, and it performed well. I measured the DA pull as 7.3 kg - typical military "emergency use only" - and the SA pull as 4.0 kg. I agree with your verdict. But it could have been improved to make a quite acceptable target revolver.
-
-
Loading gate/Cylinder latch info request
New member dutchbert apparently has a Mle. 1892 without the loading gate. He's looking for dimensions for this part so a new one can be fabricated. I've offered to do photos and give some dimensional info which won't require detail stripping my one example. But it seems the easy way out would be to inquire if anyone might have a spare!
Should do a range trip soon with this revolver soon, anyway, so refreshing this thread seemed logical.
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Hi,
Jmoore kindly agreed to make photos and measurements of the part missing on my mle1892 revolver. I would need these to have the part fabricated by a friend of mine - as an experiment for the use of his newly acquired 3D-printer. (You may have read about this new production technique.) I would need exact measurements, also of the 'backside' of the part, which is hidden from view if you don't take the revolver apart.
Jmoore's suggestion to ask you guys if you have the part as a spare is of course the better option, but I have little hope of this being successful. Not even French weapons masters have reacted to my inquiries...
Regards, Bert
-
-
-
Legacy Member
This weapon is a perfect example of the saying " if you have to ask,you'll never understand." I see a mechanical masterpiece as fine as any Swiss watch.
They sure don't make'em like they used too.!!!
I've seen plastic stuff made with these new 3D printers, can metal parts be "printed"??
Last edited by WarPig1976; 07-28-2013 at 11:00 AM.
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
@Jmoore: excellent documentation! Great detail. I think my fabricating friend can work with these. Thank you!
@WarPig1976: One of the showcases of the 3D printer is in fact a firearm. I haven't seen it myself, but if I remember correctly it's an assault rifle. The only part they do not 'print' is the firing pin...
The plan to have the mle1892 part 'printed' is an experiment, with the thought in mind that it could always be replaced by a more conventionally fabricated version.
-
Originally Posted by
dutchbert
I think my fabricating friend can work with these.
You'll have to cipher out the various angles and centerline of the pivot by examining the frame. Probably would best be done with the expectation of some hand fitting. Easier to remove metal than put it back!
---------- Post added at 12:49 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:43 AM ----------
Originally Posted by
WarPig1976
I see a mechanical masterpiece as fine as any
Swiss watch.
It does have one of the most nicely finished interiors of any firearm I've ever examined. It also appeared to have extremely robust design of the moving parts. It looks odd, but it makes sense. How well it would do full of sand or mud I don't know. Might be TOO nice!
-