Post some pictures after you clean them up.
That old S&W needs lots of love, but that is the one I would focus on. I hope the bore is good. If not those barrels pop up from time to time.So today is my birthday. Yesterday my wife said I could buy a gun at the pawnshopđ. So I bought three. A pawnshop about 50 miles from me does evidence/confiscation buys from local LE agencies and they have the âbargain sectionâ. And I am needing to have some other pieces to showcase my work. A lot of these guns are absolute junk: missing parts, JB weld repairs, solid blocks of rust. Some, the only thing that classifies them as a firearm is there is a readable serial number. But thereâs a few gems in there.
So I walked away with a Smith&Wesson 4013 .40 cal, an old Smith&Wesson .32 long pistol, and a Stevens 12 gauge pump shotgun with choked barrel. All for 600.00
They are in rough but very restorable shape. I think I found my new favorite place.
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When I get one badly rusted, I put it in a sealed tank full of ATF then let it cook for a few days, sometimes weeks. The hot sun in a sealed ATF container will dissolve lots of grime, corrosion and rust. ATF is the best cleaning solvent I ever came across.I agree, Northtidesix. Last night, as soon as I got it home, I stripped the handles off and soaked it in CLP. The cylinder release was frozen but after soaking and some gentle but repeated tapping with a brass drift punch I got it to break loose and was able to remove the cylinder assembly. Internals look pretty decent, bore has some wear but looks serviceable.
Here ya go. BTW, got my answer on the model and ship date for the revolver. It is a 1903 Smith & Wesson (shipped in 1906) .32 cal Long Hand Ejector, 6 screw 1st Change.âŚâŚ.I look forward to seeing that revolver once finished.
That cleaned up really nice.Here ya go. BTW, got my answer on the model and ship date for the revolver. It is a 1903 Smith & Wesson (shipped in 1906) .32 cal Long Hand Ejector, 6 screw 1st Change.
(Over 116-118 years old). Now fully functional and shootable. Still need to get the letter from S&W to get the original recipient and establish some provenance on it.
It looks great. Everytime I do one of these old timers I find myself thinking: If you could only talk....What a story they could tell us.Here ya go. BTW, got my answer on the model and ship date for the revolver. It is a 1903 Smith & Wesson (shipped in 1906) .32 cal Long Hand Ejector, 6 screw 1st Change.
(Over 116-118 years old). Now fully functional and shootable. Still need to get the letter from S&W to get the original recipient and establish some provenance on it.
Doc,So, on to the next fun project: A 1923 Walther PP Model 4, 3rd Variant. This one is gonna be a challenge:
1st it's all in pieces. View attachment 140133
Second: Oops. The hammer is broken in two spots. View attachment 140134
So, since I canât find a hammer anywhere for this pistol, I am gonna fabricate one. Client said â if you can fix it that would be great, if not give it a good cleaningâ
Challenge accepted, good sir. I have been waiting to put my hand scraping, metal hardening, and machining skills to the test.