Hello Revolver Types
I recently bought a used S&W Model 14 in .38 Special. I checked the action by cycling it in single action to note endshake and lateral motion. Endshake was good but I did notice that for 3 of the chambers, I could make the cylinder stop click by applying gentle rotation after the hammer was cocked. It was as if the bolt wasn't fully dropping into the bolt cuts on the cylinder. The bolt would engage the cylinder enough to prevent rotation but would 'click' if I applied light pressure to rotate the cylinder.
I checked the bolt and the cylinder bolt cuts for burrs and there's nothing obvious. I also looked at the teeth on the rear of the cylinder and nothing was obviously wrong visually but that's not to say there isn't a problem there.
My question is this: is this a serious concern and would it be expensive to repair? Will it shoot fine as long as the stop does engage enough to stop rotation or will it become a lead shaver? If it's a big pain to fix, perhaps I'll just get used to tapping the cylinder into full lockup before firing.
I recently bought a used S&W Model 14 in .38 Special. I checked the action by cycling it in single action to note endshake and lateral motion. Endshake was good but I did notice that for 3 of the chambers, I could make the cylinder stop click by applying gentle rotation after the hammer was cocked. It was as if the bolt wasn't fully dropping into the bolt cuts on the cylinder. The bolt would engage the cylinder enough to prevent rotation but would 'click' if I applied light pressure to rotate the cylinder.
I checked the bolt and the cylinder bolt cuts for burrs and there's nothing obvious. I also looked at the teeth on the rear of the cylinder and nothing was obviously wrong visually but that's not to say there isn't a problem there.
My question is this: is this a serious concern and would it be expensive to repair? Will it shoot fine as long as the stop does engage enough to stop rotation or will it become a lead shaver? If it's a big pain to fix, perhaps I'll just get used to tapping the cylinder into full lockup before firing.