easyrider604
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Greater Vancouver, BC
The gun is tight, no play. I should also mention that the lead 38 rounds were also factory loads.
After having the gun checked out, I took it to the range again yesterday and put 2 boxes of 38 through it followed by a box of 357 Mag jacketed soft points. No problems. I think the gun is fine.
What BCRider said above makes a lot of sense.
As well, most (it not all) revolvers come from the factory with barrel forcing cone angle optimized for jacketed bullets. As well, the chamber throats are also smaller than ideal for lead bullets which are usually .001 or more, larger than jacketed bullets. This is why target revolvers cyclinder throats are reamed out to .358 and the forcing cone is recut to 11 degrees, which are the optimum specs (to obtain best accuracy) for shooting lead bullets. Even without these optimum specs, I have shot thousands of lead rounds with occasional jacket .357 magnum loads, through my 686 and GP100 and have not experienced any problems. So it's likely not the issue with your revolver.
Who checked out the revolver? The lock up may be solid, bank vault tight, however, did you check the cylinder timing? I have seen some Smith revolvers with bad timing that would allow the hammer to drop even when the chamber is not Pefectly aligned with the barrel. This bad timing is more evident in double action shooting than when shooting single action.
If your revolver timing is correct, then the most likely cause is the cartridge.
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