Rolling Block Project

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AeroDillo

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Texas
A month or two back a man comes into the shop with four guns which he hopes to sell at an upcoming gun show. One is a S&W Victory in near perfect shape, which I buy outright, and a Remington Rolling block wearing a Numrich Arms rebuild kit, which I don't.

A few days later he comes back with another gun in need of repair and I - having had a couple of days to ponder new projects I can't (read: shouldn't) afford, asked how much he wanted for the Remington. It was pretty rough. The stock was the color and texture of cardboard. Most of the barrel had external rust wandering into pit territory. Whoever did the polish and blue work prior evidently loved his polishing wheel. The buttplate had an attached heel piece that appeared to have been partially sheared off because the curved upper element was the approximate thickness of a beer can. Most of the screw heads weredeformed, there was half a jar of heavy grease inside the action, and that 28-inch octagon mountain man barrel made the whole thing slightly less nose-heavy than Titanic after the iceberg business.

On the other hand it was old, and the new-ish barrel showed a near pristine bore, and he wanted $200. And on that day I learned, again, that I am a weak man.

I figured it'd be an easy fix. Bring it it in, address those pits and finish issues, throw some finish on the stock...nothing to it.

Well.

I'll spare the goriest of details. Suffice it to say that caution was flung to the winds. The best-laid plans were torn asunder and set alight. I live in mortal fear of the day I figure up what this would have cost at the shop rate. Hooray for slow weeks.

Here's the tally on changes -

- recut overpolished receiver contours
- install new wood at heel and refit the buttplate
- reshape the comb
- stain/refinish of furniture
- reduce the dimensions of the octagon
- decide I want a half-octagon
- decide I want a wedding-band transition between octagon and round
- reshape the forearm to Schnabel
- rust blue of barrel and small parts
- caustic blue of pins and hammer/block
- imitation case coloring on receiver and buttplate*

*I'm not altogether content with how this came out, but it will suffice until such time as I can find an outfit that does proper case-coloring.

The last step, yet incomplete, will entail new sights and a box of trapdoor loads. That's going to have to wait for another payday. Until then, I think she'll make for a pretty enough wallhanger. I may also look into having the checkering re-cut on the hammer and block.

But expect you came here for pictures, so...here's pictures.

befaft copy.JPG IMG_1279.JPG IMG_1296.JPG IMG_1301.JPG IMG_1341.JPG IMG_1349.JPG IMG_1351.JPG IMG_1352.JPG
 
Man, love that thing. I' not much of a sight guy. That thing screams "scope me with a very vintage optic!
 
I've toyed with the idea of a vintage optic, but there's something about a rifle with just the irons that has a certain appeal. The Smith Enterprises M-95 is foremost in the running for now. Can't be any worse than the buckhorn I took off, and being as I've never seen anything like a prototype for this setup I don't figure a simple ladder is too far out of bounds. Never been enough of a fan of tang sights. On top of that, the receiver on this thing was pretty hard; I'm loathe to drill any new holes if it's not absolutely necessary.

If I don't find any more favorable alternatives the front sight looks like it'll be a Skinner high post.

The fake case-coloring is Birchwood-Casey cold blue. With practice you can do a passable imitation that'll fool an unpracticed eye at ten feet, though as is pretty apparent the illusion doesn't hold up as well at close range. A couple of the prior attempts were markedly better with respect to color and pattern...naturally, those got zapped when the clear-coat process failed and the receiver had to be stripped to try again.

The rifle is chambered in .45-70. From the limited markings remaining before the overhaul this was a No.1 (patent date on the tang was 1866) so most likely I'll keep it to cowboy loads on the occasions it goes afield.

edited to add:

I'm not sure how much weight I took off the barrel, but the difference in going to from a 1 1/8 octagon to a 3/4 round makes a considerable difference in handling. I may regret this when it comes shooting time.
 
Beautiful Job! Trapdoor loads are best for the gun. Anything stronger would be painful to shoot anyway, with that crescent butt plate. I know from experience that re-cutting the checkering on the hammer and breech block is difficult to do. They were originally case hardened and that old time case hardening is very tough to cut through. I completely trashed both sides of a checkering file when I tried it.
 
I have shot my 45/70 Roller out to 600 yards and killed a buffalo at 155 yards. A 405 gr. lead bullet at 1250 fps. blackpowder load has a lot of arc at 600 yards. Trust me you need a Soule Rear Sight and hooded front sight for serious shooting.

Lee Shaver makes a nice Soule type tang sight,
 
I've toyed with the idea of a vintage optic, but there's something about a rifle with just the irons that has a certain appeal. The Smith Enterprises M-95 is foremost in the running for now. Can't be any worse than the buckhorn I took off, and being as I've never seen anything like a prototype for this setup I don't figure a simple ladder is too far out of bounds. Never been enough of a fan of tang sights. On top of that, the receiver on this thing was pretty hard; I'm loathe to drill any new holes if it's not absolutely necessary.

If I don't find any more favorable alternatives the front sight looks like it'll be a Skinner high post.

The fake case-coloring is Birchwood-Casey cold blue. With practice you can do a passable imitation that'll fool an unpracticed eye at ten feet, though as is pretty apparent the illusion doesn't hold up as well at close range. A couple of the prior attempts were markedly better with respect to color and pattern...naturally, those got zapped when the clear-coat process failed and the receiver had to be stripped to try again.

The rifle is chambered in .45-70. From the limited markings remaining before the overhaul this was a No.1 (patent date on the tang was 1866) so most likely I'll keep it to cowboy loads on the occasions it goes afield.

edited to add:

I'm not sure how much weight I took off the barrel, but the difference in going to from a 1 1/8 octagon to a 3/4 round makes a considerable difference in handling. I may regret this when it comes shooting time.


Not likely - trap door level loads are pretty mild. :thumbup:
 
Options, options...

I think the greater limiting factor is what my eyes can do. I'm liking that combination front sight, though.
 
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