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Shotguns / My 1897's
« Last post by Abilene on Today at 07:14:08 PM »
So there has been very little discussion on this "Shotgun" forum about '97's, especially Chinese '97's.  So here goes.

I did not own a '97 and had no desire for one.  To me it wasn't "cowboy", although I did enjoy seeing a skilled person run one.  But then I decided to get into Wild Bunch and needed one, so in 2013 when I was still part-timing with Cimarron I bought one of their TTN-made '97's.  Some of these guns had problems and they don't have a good reputation.  But I was able to hand-pick and run dummies through a gun from the "scratch and dent" shelf (very minor blueing issue) and got it for about $300.  It was a little stiff but worked fine and never gave me any problems.  I didn't shoot it much but tried it for CAS and found that it was "fun".  Later picked up a 30" solid-frame from 1911 in very good condition and started using it.  Then a 24" take-down from 1911, which I had cut to 20".  I was still only shooting them occasionally.  But the '97 guys always say (only half-joking) that you need 3 - the one you are shooting, the one that is at the gunsmith, and I forget what the third was for  :) .  But I had my three.

Then in 2021 I ran across a New in the box IAC "Cowboy" model for $300!!  This would go for over $1K on the SASS Wire.  Deal of the century! The Cowboy was the latest and greatest of the Chinese '97's, with a "CB" serial number prefix.  I got it from a gunsmith/dealer who was having health problems and was retiring.  He obviously did not know the worth of it.  These guns have some innovations that make them much smoother than previous guns, and need no action work.  Well, that's not entirely true.  Originally there were contracted to be 450 of these guns made.  But later, the factory made another 5 or 6 hundred with the leftover parts.  Mine, being s/n CB0009xx was one of those.  Same smoothness, but they mixed CNC and non-CNC parts so the ejection is not nearly as forceful as the "good" ones.  Outlaw Gambler says he can fix that up for me, but since the ejection is satisfactory for now I'm using it, plus I don't like to ship guns.  This thing is so smooth I started shooting it in CAS matches, and found out that I really, really like slam-firing!  It is just so satisfying.  ;D 

Now, I've done very little practice with it, and so I'm no faster, sometimes slower, than with my SxS.  My hands are small so "grabbing 4" is not an option.  I have tried some various techniques.  I can do one in the right hand and 3 in the left, dropping the one into the port before picking it up, but often not very smooth with loading the 3 over the top.  2 over the top is smoother, but you have to go to the belt again.  I can load faster with two in the right hand, but my left wrist is too weak to pick up the  shotgun to get it quickly into position.  So sometimes I'm loading two over the top and then two from the right.  I do fumble a fair amount - need more practice!  But then there is that satisfying slam firing.  I've gotten to where I don't miss much.  So lately I'm shooting about 50/50 '97 and SxS.  Obviously SxS when I shoot BP. 

And then last week - - get an email from local club that an old-time shooter, Blue Thorn, who hasn't shot in years, is selling his stuff.  So I bought his IAC Norinco with Coyote Cap full race action job for $700.  This thing has had very little use and is in excellent condition.  I also sold my TTN '97 for $350 the same weekend to a local shooter who plans to use it for home defense.  After I got it home and compared it to the IAC Cowboy model, they feel just about the same.  The CC (Coyote Cap) gun is possibly a hair slicker.  But I also noticed that the CC gun has had the buttstock cut and a decelerator pad installed, and it is 1 5/8" shorter than the CB model.  It shouldered fine and I ran some dummies through it fine before comparing it to the other and noticing the shorter stock.  I have long arms and usually don't like cut stocks, but this seems okay.  Interestingly, the barrel is also 3/8" shorter than the CB model, which came out years later. 

So now I'm chomping to go try it out, hopefully at the match this weekend, but rain chances are not looking too good.  This club will shoot anyway, as they have some buildings to shoot from, but my guncart is not weather protected.  Perhaps I'll work out of a saddlebag this time.  Anyways, enough talk, here's the new Chinchester by itself, the left side of the bolt where Coyote Cap signed it, and then with the CB model.


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Shotguns / Re: 1897 Winchester Takedown
« Last post by Abilene on Today at 06:05:15 PM »
Hey All,
Just acquired a 1902 vintage 97 takedown, and it’s a non numbers matching gun so I’m going to go all out modifying and tuning it for CAS. Who would you suggest to have them do the mechanical work? Seller says it has feed issues with the subsequent shell after firing the first, but I’m pretty sure I know the issue. I’m just looking for someone to get it slicked up and running like a clock once I make the necessary repairs to fix the feed issues. I’m thinking about having Tyler Gun Wirks do the refinish of the bluing. Any advice is appreciated! Thanks
Brandon/WheelGunner

Well, gee, I just saw this a year and a half after you posted it.  If you see this response, did you ever get your '97 slicked up?  There are a few 'smiths that are good with these but I think the lack of parts is a problem these days.  I know that Outlaw Gambler at  https://classicoldwestarms.com has a good reputation.
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The link works for me on both laptop and Android phone.

yeah i got it to work, just got impatient. my bad
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The Darksider's Den / Re: .45 Cowboy Special
« Last post by Coffinmaker on Today at 04:39:15 PM »

 :)  WHAT??  Curmudgeon??  Extraordinaire??  Why Sir, I'll have you know I strongly RESEMBLE that.  8)  So There.  And I prefer STONE wheels  ::)  And Coffinmaker is ONE WURD!!  Take That  :o 

Which brings about one of my Buggaboos and annoyances whilst practicing the Dark Art of Gun Plumbing.  RUGER.  Purportedly the most superb of superb of Single Action tools.  Hornswagel.  I never met a Ruger I liked.  Ruger be famous, or infamous for delivering their marvelously magical Vaqueros with grossly undersize throats.  In any caliber.  What crap.  They ALL needed the throats reamed.

Hummmmm.  Plastics.  Really??  Plastics.  I Am Reviewing The Situation (Stoled famous movie line).  Burma Shave
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The Darksider's Den / Re: .45 Cowboy Special
« Last post by Mako on Today at 04:16:19 PM »
Does anybody know what the throats would be on a .45 ACP cylinder?

The reason I ask is because my 3rd Gen Colt's regular .45 Colt cylinder has .455 - .456" diameter throats.  If the .45 ACP has .451 - .452" throats I bet the Cowboy Special could be a tack driver.

Lonesome and the rest,
I have been cooling my heels and perusing files on my computer and posts from over a decade on this site, I found my information on the Gen 1 Colt I have.




I don't remember the topic anymore it might have been a discussion about Conversion Cylinder dimensions, but I was measuring bores and cylinders.  That cylinder will pass a Ø.455+ gauge pin but not a .456.  The grove diameter is definitely Ø.454 as measured on those two balls, the land diameter would accept a Ø.442- pin all of the way through, but the Ø.442+ pin was tight and stuck after about 1 inch.

That's my revolver, it is a "family gun".  It was made in 1896 and is not marked as a Smokeless "approved" frame.  1896 was the "transition" year. However, it does have the push button cylinder pin release.  I have heard arguments and read a couple of books considered to be the authority on SSAs that the buttons started to replace the screws as early as 1892 and was phased in as Colt's had their frames already set up one way or another.

So, I guess my point is that the older Colts used to be relatively tight in the throats considering they used Ø.454 bullets.  It seems the modern revolvers S&W and Colt's actually often have looser throats compared to the original revolver it was chambered in.  A Ø.455 throat to a Ø.454 bore is about as perfect as you could ask for.

~Mako
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RATS / Re: Ruger Old Model Super Blackhawk Ejector Screw
« Last post by Boggus Deal on Today at 03:19:14 PM »
Did you find one?
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The Darksider's Den / Re: .45 Cowboy Special
« Last post by Mako on Today at 02:37:15 PM »
:)Hey !!  ;)

So how is it then, when we swage a Round Ball down in the Chamber, well sub bore diameter, the stupid thing will group just fine.  Shooting just as accurate as most suppository shooters.  Atz Oxymoron.  Really.  So, why don't we just skip ALL of this super technical fecal matter and just load Roun Ball in our Suppository Shooters???

Harrumpff

Spoken like a true Moss Back... a Curmudgeon extraordinaire... Our Coffin Maker.

When you only get a contact patch like this on these two Ø.454 (or Ø.457, I can't remember now)  Balls driven down the barrel of a a Gen 1 SAA  you can get away with almost anything.  I'll look up the diameters when I get home.  That was 12 or 13 years ago.



The only man I know who uses iron Banded wheel on his truck instead of a pneumatic tire.

And you are correct, there are a few variables.  The Throat probably being number one and the groove diameter being number two in importance.

"There's a great future in plastics. Think about it. Will you think about it?"

~Mako
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The Longbranch / Re: gunoholic
« Last post by Major 2 on Today at 12:20:40 PM »
Tiz home  :D  Happy B'day to me  ;)
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Gary did an excellent relining job with my 51 barrel, the bobbed 61 barrel is still OEM bore. and I used Heeled bullets 
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STORM / Re: 44 Colt to 44 Special
« Last post by Graveyard Jack on Today at 12:18:23 PM »
Any Gunsmith worth the title, whom would Bead Blast and Parkerize an original Open Top, regardless of present condition, should be de-frocked, horse whipped, keel hauled then shot.
Amen to that!
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