re-pinning a SxS shotgun

You got that right and the beauty of this one, is it did cost a dime.

I live at my job (live on site property manager for a strata of 66 SUMMER cabins) so I have loads of time in the winter. it's on an off grid island, on a part of the island with no roads only a dock, so there is no where to go. my wife kicks me out 8 hours a day so I need to find stuff to do.

She's a stay at home mom and home schools our youngest 3, so I'm often kicked out from 9-5 lol ( she does send a lunch and coffees up to me mid day)
 
You got that right and the beauty of this one, is it did cost a dime.

I live at my job (live on site property manager for a strata of 66 SUMMER cabins) so I have loads of time in the winter. it's on an off grid island, on a part of the island with no roads only a dock, so there is no where to go. my wife kicks me out 8 hours a day so I need to find stuff to do.

She's a stay at home mom and home schools our youngest 3, so I'm often kicked out from 9-5 lol ( she does send a lunch and coffees up to me mid day)
Great work getting the old classic back in action!
Another simple method of tightening up loose break actions can be with a sleeve on the hinge pin. I tried it once on a whim, and it worked so well that I tried it again, also with great results. It beats gluing a shim onto the hook by a million miles.
(Gluing a shim onto the hook works ok, until it falls off at a most embarrassing moment.)
A sleeve can be machined out of hardened steel, or it can be hardened after the fact.
 
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