Hi all,
Recently I received an original Winchester 1892 in .44-40 from my uncle (who, in turn, received it from his grandfather), which was manufactured in 1895 (according to the serial number approximations).
It seems like the rifle was never cleaned, as it had grass and dirt in the barrel and trigger group. The metal is also in poor/mediocre condition; the bluing is pretty much gone and there is surface rust all over the firearm. The flathead screws are also relatively stripped, and one screwhead attaching left locking bolt is broken. I decided to try to disassemble it, and give it some deep cleaning and light polishing, to try to breathe some life back into it.
I downloaded this disassembly guide from Gun's Digest, which seems very complete.
http://www.gundigest.com/online-gunsmithing-tools/winchester-model-1892-assemblydisassembly-instructions-download
I got to the step which involves drifting the pin with a punch towards the left side of the receiver, in order to separate the lever from the breechblock (bolt). However, no matter how much time I spend trying to push this pin out, it simply refuses to budge. This step is shown at approximately 9:55 of this youtube video (who makes it look so easy!
):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHmC4nBJUyc
I've tried:
-Hoppe's #9
-PB Blaster overnight
-Acetone/ATF (1:1 volume) mix
-Senseless, hopeless hammering
-Taking a C-clamp to the punch; this didn't work, as I couldn't get it to apply pressure on the punch's axis, it would bend the punch.
At this point, I managed to remove all the remaining internals, so that only the breechblock and lever remain in the action.
My next step will be taking a soldering iron to the pin, then spraying some water to rapidly cool it. I'd do it now, but I seem to have misplaced my soldering iron?
If this doesn't work, I may consider drilling it out.
Any insight, comments, or suggestions would be very appreciated.
Thank you all
Recently I received an original Winchester 1892 in .44-40 from my uncle (who, in turn, received it from his grandfather), which was manufactured in 1895 (according to the serial number approximations).
It seems like the rifle was never cleaned, as it had grass and dirt in the barrel and trigger group. The metal is also in poor/mediocre condition; the bluing is pretty much gone and there is surface rust all over the firearm. The flathead screws are also relatively stripped, and one screwhead attaching left locking bolt is broken. I decided to try to disassemble it, and give it some deep cleaning and light polishing, to try to breathe some life back into it.
I downloaded this disassembly guide from Gun's Digest, which seems very complete.
http://www.gundigest.com/online-gunsmithing-tools/winchester-model-1892-assemblydisassembly-instructions-download
I got to the step which involves drifting the pin with a punch towards the left side of the receiver, in order to separate the lever from the breechblock (bolt). However, no matter how much time I spend trying to push this pin out, it simply refuses to budge. This step is shown at approximately 9:55 of this youtube video (who makes it look so easy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHmC4nBJUyc
I've tried:
-Hoppe's #9
-PB Blaster overnight
-Acetone/ATF (1:1 volume) mix
-Senseless, hopeless hammering
-Taking a C-clamp to the punch; this didn't work, as I couldn't get it to apply pressure on the punch's axis, it would bend the punch.
At this point, I managed to remove all the remaining internals, so that only the breechblock and lever remain in the action.
My next step will be taking a soldering iron to the pin, then spraying some water to rapidly cool it. I'd do it now, but I seem to have misplaced my soldering iron?
If this doesn't work, I may consider drilling it out.
Any insight, comments, or suggestions would be very appreciated.
Thank you all