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.44 Magnum
Am Shooting Journal ^ | 8/28/2018 | J Dee

Posted on 08/28/2018 4:50:46 AM PDT by w1n1

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To: Comment Not Approved
"..Been looking at Henry BB for a while now.."

I've enjoyed this Henry thus far outside of the annoying proprietary hole pattern on top of the receiver. Nothing a quick trip to the 'smith couldn't fix. I also had a minor issue with the bolt not clearing the hammer for breech cleaning. But that was very well handled by Henry.

I'm in agreement about the chest rigs. Outside of my "cowboy guns", that's the only way I'll haul a handgun in the woods. Gonna try one of the Kenai Chest Rigs from GunfightersINC for the Redhawk. Seems a little beefier for that size revolver.

We've got a pile of pigs at my hunt club (near Rockingham, NC) and hunting them is unlimited. But the biggest ya see is ~250#. No "hogzillas".
Thermal has added a new dimension to that gig. Porky& Petunia have a hard time hiding from that! Hehehe. d;^)

61 posted on 08/29/2018 5:01:01 AM PDT by CopperTop (Outside the wire it's just us chickens. Dig?)
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To: rellimpank
--this site is without doubt, the greatest disgrace to both writing and firearms knowledge on the internet---

He really is an idiot, isn't he?

Oh well it allows me to sit and thing a moment about my nine--or is it ten?--different .44 mag firearms and how enjoyable they are. Were. Before the flood.

62 posted on 08/29/2018 5:09:36 AM PDT by Fightin Whitey
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To: riverrunner

Thank you. I was ready to pull the trigger on a .460(after watching hickok video) but alas I lost my job and will have to have 8-3/8” S&W 29 suffice.


63 posted on 08/29/2018 6:18:29 AM PDT by 2nd Amendment
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To: DungeonMaster

Love me some DA wheelgun! (Well, do ya?)

I’ven’t had mine out for a coon’s age. (Can I still say that nowadays?) But .44 Mag is one caliber I don’t have (yet).


64 posted on 08/30/2018 7:18:11 AM PDT by newgeezer ("You believed that sh*t? I meant 'FILL THE SWAMP' all along!" -- Donald J. Trump's brain 3/23/2018)
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To: Vaquero

“You are wise in the ways of the lever gun...

“...I figured any 94 pre 64 would be quality. ... you couldn’t keep it on a paper plate at 100 yds...The band was so cocked that it torqued the barrel. i tweeked the band open a tad and bolted it back on. Got the same accuracy that I had without the band...

“...A friend who worked in a gun store bought an Italian Henry rifle...As he was loading it with lead bullets dropping them down the tube, one went off. Luckily no one got hurt. The tube blew off the gun...” [Vaquero, post 51]

Many thanks for the courteous reply. Apologies for my tardy response.

My experiences in gun repair indicated that pre-1964 Winchesters 94s were superior to later production, but any mass-market manufacturer could slip up on quality control and let a lemon escape, then get sold to the dissatisfaction of an unlucky customer. Happened across the board and still does - to the detriment of flagship models and budget items. No company and no product was immune.

Another truism, of an engineering/production nature: any rifle design that hangs things on the barrel will exhibit poorer accuracy than a design that doesn’t do it. Less torques/stresses on the barrel in the latter usually degrade accuracy less.

The practical import? Tube-fed lever actions, and autoloading rifles generally, rarely display group sizes smaller than bolt action rifles. All can be tweaked, and many benefit from it as you learned. Applies to military rifles too: removing the handguard, barrel bands, bayonet studs, and big chunks of forend from Mauser 98s, Springfield ‘03s, and ‘17 Enfields can tighten groups.

As a repair tech, I frequently encountered lever-action tube-fed rifles with mis-shapen barrel bands like you experienced; sometimes, screw holes were drilled off axis, in forend wood, in clearance cuts for band screws on the underside of the barrel, in brackets, in magazine tubes. Often, it became a struggle to reassemble everything after the repair, because so many items were out of alignment. Happened with Marlins and Winchesters. It became a standing joke that we were nearly guaranteed a stripped band retainer screw on latter-day Winchester 94 carbine lower bands - the screw shaft was of such small diameter, the threads were very fine pitch and quite shallow, and the holes and cuts rarely aligned after taking all of them apart.

Authorities on firearms of the 1860s have written that a cartridge igniting inside the magazine tube was a problem from the start, in the Henry rifle and the Spencer rifle too. Chainfires occurred. Both rifles began life as rimfires; priming compound installation of pioneering times left residue nearer the center of the case head, apparently.

About 25 years ago, an acquaintance suffered an ignition in the magazine tube of his replica Henry, chambered for 44-40. He was loading it with cowboy action rounds (flat nose, lead bullet) out of doors, butt plate on the ground, muzzle straight up, magazine follower all the way forward, magazine spring stuffed into the forward sleeve, sleeve rotated to one side, right hand around the gap in the magazine tube.

He’d already dropped five fresh rounds down the tube. When he dropped in the sixth round, the forward sleeve rotated back into position and the tightly compressed magazine spring drove the follower - now released - down onto the sixth round. The impact set off that round’s primer; the case blew, right where his right hand encircled the magazine and barrel. The explosion nearly severed his thumb from his hand.

He & two hunting buddies were in rural Minnesota, 55 miles from the nearest medical help. Fortunately, they got him to a hospital in time to save the thumb.

A design flaw? In hindsight, possibly. Mechanical safeties on guns were almost unknown before 1900. A Henry replica wouldn’t be much of a replica if it did have a loading gate; it would be a Winchester 1866 with the forend removed - like at least one of the rifles actor Danny Glover wielded in the film Silverado.


65 posted on 09/06/2018 11:06:51 AM PDT by schurmann
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To: schurmann

I talked to the witness who saw the tube blow after writing the post. There were two people there. One died of natural causes around 10 years after the accident, he worked in a big gun store. The witness was a cowboy action enthusiast young lady. She said that the single round went off and luckily no one got hit when the tube burst. The rounds used might have had a shard of lead sticking up from home cast bullets And just dropping the next round down hit it just right. The guy, had the gun sent back to whatever distributor for Uberti, (I assume Uberti) dealt the firearm and they replaced the tube. That being the only part damaged. This firearm was used in matches I shot in. Functioned perfectly.

BTW I remember Danny Glover’s Henry/66. It was a head scratcher. The Guns he used in Lonesome Dove appeared more normal.

My thought was that Henry arms should put loading gates on all BUT the Henry clone.


66 posted on 09/06/2018 12:06:14 PM PDT by Vaquero (Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you.)
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To: Vaquero

“...My thought was that Henry arms should put loading gates on all BUT the Henry clone.” [Vaquero, post 66]

A notion I would not disagree with at all.

I guess that any time the tip of a bullet contacts a centerfire primer, there is some chance of the primer going off. No matter how flat the tip of the bullet is. Can’t speak to the safety record of Hornady’s Leverevolution polymer-point bullets.

Remington’s designers went to a lot of trouble 100 years ago, with the tube magazines of their Model 14 (and later 141) slide-action rifles: stamped helical ridges into them, to force the cartridges (25, 30, 32, and 35 cal) to line up off center, so the pointed bullet of any round would not touch the primer of the round ahead of it in the tube.

In 1899, the French military began loading their 8x50R Lebel cartridge with a 198-gr solid bronze bullet. It had a sharp point. To render it safe for use in their Modele 1886 Lebel rifle (which had a tubular magazine), they developed a crimp for the primer that placed a deep groove around it - a “ditch” as it were, that would catch the point of the bullet of the round behind, before it would slip across the head onto the primer. Never seen any numbers on how effective it was.

I’ve never heard of an incident with 22 rimfire, where dropping a live round down the magazine tube onto the rounds already loaded caused an ignition. Have you? Perhaps 22 rimfire rounds simply don’t have the mass to overcome the stiffness of the brass case, or the ignition-energy threshold of the priming compound.


67 posted on 09/07/2018 12:21:15 PM PDT by schurmann
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