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The Range
Gunsmithing & Repairs
Mass produced revolver question
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<blockquote data-quote="D V US" data-source="post: 4090850" data-attributes="member: 34558"><p>With the modern CNC machinery and laser gauging, it is very likely that it will be a clean swap, and at the worst you might have to pull the hammer back fast enough to let the inertia of the cylinder carry it to lock. I have several old revolvers, and have seen hundreds more that operate this way. And if you have, or know someone with the ability to cut the new cylinder for moon clips, timing the new cylinder is a piece of cake.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="D V US, post: 4090850, member: 34558"] With the modern CNC machinery and laser gauging, it is very likely that it will be a clean swap, and at the worst you might have to pull the hammer back fast enough to let the inertia of the cylinder carry it to lock. I have several old revolvers, and have seen hundreds more that operate this way. And if you have, or know someone with the ability to cut the new cylinder for moon clips, timing the new cylinder is a piece of cake. [/QUOTE]
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Mass produced revolver question
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