Cas City Forum Hall & CAS-L
Special Interests - Groups & Societies => STORM => Topic started by: Navy Six on January 23, 2020, 02:47:09 PM
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Since the weather broke a bit today, I took a 1996 vintage Pietta 51 Navy(.36) out to shoot. When I got home and took the gun apart to clean, I noticed one of the frame pins had sheared off, with one half staying in the frame and the other half in the barrel lug. For some reason I put a magnet on the half in the barrel lug and it came right out. On closer examination, I noticed the pin was not solid but had some type of "core" with a metal jacket surrounding it. I can only compare it to a copper jacketed bullet with a lead core. The part that stayed in the frame looks identical. The "jacket" is very even and a noticeably different material. I have never had a pin shear off like this so I've never had to drill one out of the frame yet. I bought the gun brand new so I know the pin is original.
My question is this: Is this how these pins are normally constructed? I was just surprised at what I found.
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All the ones I have seen have solid steel pins.... :o
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PLUS ONE too The Lawman.
I have seen the pins come out of the frame. I have not had one that had broken. What you describe, sounds to me like a steel pin with a crystalized center. There would be no economic reason to make a small part like that out of two different materials.
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"...sounds to me like a steel pin with a crystalized center. "
ditto ...I think Coffin maker is spot on
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Hello Navy Six.
Sounds like a case hardened pin to me, when parts are case hardened only the surface is hardened.
I know on a Thompson Shaft (Trade Marked) when you face it off, the end will give the appearance
of two different materials. I'll bet the center is soft.
AntiqueSledMan.