A Very Special Custom Manurhin MR73 by Dave Laubert

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cundiff5535

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Before I get into this, apologies for the long post, but I wanted to walk you all through my journey!

Around a year ago I found a MR73 revo I snagged off GB. The MR73 was a police trade in that looked a bit rough on the outside, but mechanically was in perfect working order! At the time, I was really excited to get it, but I knew it was only a matter of time before it went off to someone to get some "brought back to life". Once I got the gun and made my mind up that I was going to get work done on it, I called several friends and asked who they thought I should sent it to. Four names came up pretty regularly... Ted Yost, Karl Beining, Dave Laubert, and Brandan Bunker.

Because I am friends with Brandan (and know his work well), I called him first... he told he he was not doing any work on anything other than 1911's these days and that he just did not have time. I knew if I bugged him enough, he would likely do it, but... why not call the others on the short list and see how the experience would go.

Second, I called Ted. Ted flat out told me he had no desire to work on an MR73 and currently he was only working on Smiths (and maybe Colts if I remember correctly). Either way, Ted said no but did recommend Karls work.

From there I called Karl and we spoke for around 30 mins. He was a real gentleman and we had a nice conversation about the MR73. During the chat, he told me the turn around time would be a bit longer than I wanted to wait. I told him I was going to call Dave and chat with him and make a decision from there.

Last on the list... Dave Laubert. I had never heard of Dave Laubert until I got to listen to him on a Primary and Secondary Modcast. From there his name kept coming up so I decided to really look at what he was doing. At the time, he had just finished up the two gun revo set "spinny twins" which I thought were lights out. I had heard guys like Steve Fisher talk about Daves 1911 work, so that alone was a vote of confidence.

My chat with Dave was fantastic... He may be one of the nicest dudes Ive ever spoke to (for real). I could tell his revo build philosophy was different than Karls, and he had me intrigued. I asked about wait time, and initially it was much much faster than what Karl told me.

From my chats, I knew if I went with Karl, the revo would be stellar... A spin on a classic revolver, refined to the last detail! I knew Karl would take the thing, do his magic, have it re-engraved, and have the thing looking better than ever. With Dave, I figured the some of the finer detail might get lost, but it would be as if someone took a classic and made it into a modern day fighting weapon... a straight hot rod! Like 69 Camero with a 2020 Corvette ZR1 engine in it.

Whether the above is 100% true, this was what I took away.

Ultimately, I decided to go with Dave... literally it was a total coin flip... So, I sent the revo to Dave and thought I was headed into a project with a 90 day turn around. As with all custom work times get messed up, things happen in life, and 90 days turns into a year. Oh well... Its the way it is in custom guns.

So thats the back story.

Once I sent the gun to Dave, I told him my vision of the gun and then said, other than my initial thoughts and vision, for him to do his thing! Just keep me looped in if he decided to make drastic changes! It seemed like he was pretty much excited to get into the project and he definitely brought me in on the details as he was going (which was awesome). Because I am a very very meticulous person, I often times expect perfection when it comes to my guns. I am always very upfront about this... and either the smith tells me that he's probably not the guy to do the work (which tells me I don't want him doing the work), or he assures me he will be making sure there are no short cuts taken.

So, I told Dave that I wanted his spin on a full blown modern day fighting revo... and that exactly what he did! Here is some of work done is below (but not all):

  • Remove and shorten barrel from 4" to 3" and resinstall
  • Crown Barrel
  • Slab Side Barrel
  • Recut forcing cone on barrel
  • Machine to accept new front sight
  • Make new front sight, Serrate, and install 14k .080 gold bead
  • Machine receiver to accept one off custom rear sight
  • Make new rear sight
  • Chamfer charging holes
  • Full trigger work
  • Case Color hammer and trigger
  • Remove all roll marks from gun
  • Complete polish on flats and matte blast rounds
  • Nitre Blue screws

So, here you all go... IMO the nicest MR73 in the entire world! Ive not seen anything even close in terms of work to one of these. The trigger on the gun is by far the best revo trigger I have ever felt... The whole package is seriously top drawer!


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Beautiful gun and beautiful Nills Grips!
Thank you for sharing!
-Stan

The grips are amazing on this gun. I have several sets of Nills on other firearms... but these are just different. The grip is incredible and the way they sit in your hand is so comfortable! I dont think I called them out much in the write up, so than you for pointing them out! The do deserve special attention...
 
Very nice. I hope you find it to be money well spent.

In all honesty, any custom gun that I have ever ordered or sent off is money well spent. When approaching a project, it is not as if you just decide one day to spend some money send a gun off and then poof, you have a masterpiece. It takes time, planning, and for me a lot of research to finally get to the point where I will "pull the trigger".

There is and are alot of guys out there who are total hacks... and there are a lot of guys out there who dont know any better and just pay some smiths to do half ass work. Its always been something that drove me nuts.

Anyway, yes... I've had the revolver back from Dave for a while now and its a dream to shoot and something Im proud to own.
 
Thank you Sir!

-Stan

Well you can’t just leave me hanging now... you gonna call for work? Maybe a project gun?! Spill the beans:)

In all seriousness though...

Dave lost his mother last week, so he may be slower to reply than usual. Just a heads up there.

Also, Google search “Dave Laubert Spinny Twins”. That pair of model 10’s was something special!
 
How's it shoot?

I hope this doesn’t come off wrong... it shoots like an MR73... the testing on these guns had to live up to a specific set of standards prior to going into service! There is no change in that performance (meaning the guns accurate and strong), and there is no way to really improve on that. The gun was tested in a rest by Dave prior to being sent back to me... still rock solid.

“How do I shoot it” is a different question. Shooting a 158gr bullet over 14gr of 2400 is a bomb. It’s hard to control that recoil for me out of a 6” revo, so out of a 3” gun it looks like a damn fireball!

For me it’s a ton of fun... am I as accurate with it as a 4.25” 1911... No. can I hit a steel plate at Defensive situation distances... not a problem.
 
Before I get into this, apologies for the long post, but I wanted to walk you all through my journey!

Around a year ago I found a MR73 revo I snagged off GB. The MR73 was a police trade in that looked a bit rough on the outside, but mechanically was in perfect working order! At the time, I was really excited to get it, but I knew it was only a matter of time before it went off to someone to get some "brought back to life". Once I got the gun and made my mind up that I was going to get work done on it, I called several friends and asked who they thought I should sent it to. Four names came up pretty regularly... Ted Yost, Karl Beining, Dave Laubert, and Brandan Bunker.

Because I am friends with Brandan (and know his work well), I called him first... he told he he was not doing any work on anything other than 1911's these days and that he just did not have time. I knew if I bugged him enough, he would likely do it, but... why not call the others on the short list and see how the experience would go.

Second, I called Ted. Ted flat out told me he had no desire to work on an MR73 and currently he was only working on Smiths (and maybe Colts if I remember correctly). Either way, Ted said no but did recommend Karls work.

From there I called Karl and we spoke for around 30 mins. He was a real gentleman and we had a nice conversation about the MR73. During the chat, he told me the turn around time would be a bit longer than I wanted to wait. I told him I was going to call Dave and chat with him and make a decision from there.

Last on the list... Dave Laubert. I had never heard of Dave Laubert until I got to listen to him on a Primary and Secondary Modcast. From there his name kept coming up so I decided to really look at what he was doing. At the time, he had just finished up the two gun revo set "spinny twins" which I thought were lights out. I had heard guys like Steve Fisher talk about Daves 1911 work, so that alone was a vote of confidence.

My chat with Dave was fantastic... He may be one of the nicest dudes Ive ever spoke to (for real). I could tell his revo build philosophy was different than Karls, and he had me intrigued. I asked about wait time, and initially it was much much faster than what Karl told me.

From my chats, I knew if I went with Karl, the revo would be stellar... A spin on a classic revolver, refined to the last detail! I knew Karl would take the thing, do his magic, have it re-engraved, and have the thing looking better than ever. With Dave, I figured the some of the finer detail might get lost, but it would be as if someone took a classic and made it into a modern day fighting weapon... a straight hot rod! Like 69 Camero with a 2020 Corvette ZR1 engine in it.

Whether the above is 100% true, this was what I took away.

Ultimately, I decided to go with Dave... literally it was a total coin flip... So, I sent the revo to Dave and thought I was headed into a project with a 90 day turn around. As with all custom work times get messed up, things happen in life, and 90 days turns into a year. Oh well... Its the way it is in custom guns.

So thats the back story.

Once I sent the gun to Dave, I told him my vision of the gun and then said, other than my initial thoughts and vision, for him to do his thing! Just keep me looped in if he decided to make drastic changes! It seemed like he was pretty much excited to get into the project and he definitely brought me in on the details as he was going (which was awesome). Because I am a very very meticulous person, I often times expect perfection when it comes to my guns. I am always very upfront about this... and either the smith tells me that he's probably not the guy to do the work (which tells me I don't want him doing the work), or he assures me he will be making sure there are no short cuts taken.

So, I told Dave that I wanted his spin on a full blown modern day fighting revo... and that exactly what he did! Here is some of work done is below (but not all):

  • Remove and shorten barrel from 4" to 3" and resinstall
  • Crown Barrel
  • Slab Side Barrel
  • Recut forcing cone on barrel
  • Machine to accept new front sight
  • Make new front sight, Serrate, and install 14k .080 gold bead
  • Machine receiver to accept one off custom rear sight
  • Make new rear sight
  • Chamfer charging holes
  • Full trigger work
  • Case Color hammer and trigger
  • Remove all roll marks from gun
  • Complete polish on flats and matte blast rounds
  • Nitre Blue screws

So, here you all go... IMO the nicest MR73 in the entire world! Ive not seen anything even close in terms of work to one of these. The trigger on the gun is by far the best revo trigger I have ever felt... The whole package is seriously top drawer!

My wife just walked by and asked if I had wet my pants and I had to explain that was just my drooling from the last five minutes looking at that beautiful revolver.
 
Beautiful.

The blueing work is just stunning, which of course means the polishing prior to the blueing is phenomenal.

I very much like the understated look to the whole. I've seen some flashy work on what had been classic revolvers, and to me the flashy engraving and whatnot just pimps the work.
When looking at a revolver with slot of flash, I often wonder if the flash is intended to hide something.

This revolver is gorgeous. Just a well done ' here it is'. Not trying to be something it isn't.

I would be proud to own a piece such as that.
 
Nice! Did he have to set back the barrel to recut the forcing cone? I have a working MR73 with wear to the forcing cone that I'd like to have customized by the right person one day.
 
Nice! Did he have to set back the barrel to recut the forcing cone? I have a working MR73 with wear to the forcing cone that I'd like to have customized by the right person one day.

Yes, when Dave pulled the barrel, he also recut and cleaned up the forcing cone. It’s one of the things I didn’t list in terms of work done. For fun, I’ll post some progress pics of the work done. They are truly eye opening. I didn’t expect the post to get this much attention, but since it has... detailed work in progress pics are warranted! I’ll get em up tomorrow!
 
A very nice, well done gun. Not exactly my "cup of tea", but I can appreciate a nicely modified arm. I think the fire-blued screws are an especially nice touch. Being unfamiliar with Manurhin revolvers, I must ask: is the rear sight adjustable? Judging by the two screws in the top-strap I assume yes, but can't tell for sure.

Mac
 
A very nice, well done gun. Not exactly my "cup of tea", but I can appreciate a nicely modified arm. I think the fire-blued screws are an especially nice touch. Being unfamiliar with Manurhin revolvers, I must ask: is the rear sight adjustable? Judging by the two screws in the top-strap I assume yes, but can't tell for sure.

Mac

Some Mr73 revolvers came with adjustable rear sights. This one was a police carry model which originally came with a 4” barrel and fixed channel rear sight (think s&w model 10).

When I had Dave do the work, I didn’t think adjustable sights made sense since we were going to cut down the barrel to 3”. With that said, I did want a functional rear sight that aimed more like a traditional handgun (vs revo). When Dave made the rear sight, he constructed it in a way that he also filled the entire sight channel... that’s where you see the screws. It’s actually to reinforce and hold the sight down in several spots vs just one screw to hold that rear sight down. It’s a wonderfully thought out and constructed design he came up with.

When I post additional pics here shortly, you will see what I am talking about:)
 
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