Cas City Forum Hall & CAS-L
Special Interests - Groups & Societies => 1860 Henry => Topic started by: Driftwood Johnson on October 24, 2015, 05:26:32 PM
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Howdy
I may be kicking myself later, but I passed on an old Navy Arms Henry today. This is the model that had the lever safety just like a '73 has. SN was something like 266. Brass framed, 44-40. Looked in very nice shape, just a couple of tiny spots of rust. $750. Call me crazy, but I seem to recall these were different enough from the later Uberti Henrys that there is a problem getting parts for them. Otherwise I probably would have grabbed it, even though I already have one Henry.
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DJ
I think you did the right thing. There are lots of parts on the old Navy Arms Henrys that are just different enough that it makes repairs a real tricky project. Most new parts can be made to fit but you have to be real cleaver to make them work.
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Driftwood,
Good decision. Take it from a Retired Gunplumber, you wanted nothing to do with that Navy Arms rifle. Unless you really wanted an expensive 3 dimensional wall decoration.
What you have heard in the woodwork is correct. The dimensions of the moving parts and the Geometry of the rifle is enough different,
nothing from today's guns fits. If something breaks, the only thing you can do, is find a "Happy Trails" that isn't retired to make you new parts from scratch. That can be a real expensive proposition.
You should however, avail yourself of a new manufacture "Brass" rifle to go with your "Iron" rifle. There is a rather nice example of a
Transitional available on the SASS Classifieds. ;)
Coffinmaker
(Who still wants an "Iron" Henry)
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Or just use reproduction 1866 parts. Mine has a hammer as well as several springs that are 1866.
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I've got one in a box looking for parts. Aside from the differences already noted, the bolt and bolt extension are different than current production Uberti Henrys and the new ones don't come close to fitting correctly.
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I have used my Navy Arms Henry over 10 years. I guess not as hard as some of you's. Only thing ever replaced was the springs did that with Whisper Springs and one Uberti screw. Apparently i ned to work my gun harder, so it breaks more often.
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The Henry being discussed is one of the "old" ones, ie., from the 1970s or early 80s. Much older than your ten year old Henry for which parts are still available.
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If i could get it to NZ easly i would give it a home. Always looking for older guns to play with.