One thing that I like about the SA revolvers is they're very easy to customize. Even when it comes down to the little mechanical components. Btw, it would have been nice if you would have measured the amount of force required to cock the hammer before and after as well.
From Aldo Uberti, Italian founder of a factory that manufactures high-quality replicas of 19th century revolvers, carbines, and rifles, as well as cartridge revolvers, single-shot rifles, and lever-action rifles.
Hello, I have an Uberti Cattlema and I'm having troubles with some short of plumber and spring that don't belong to the gate but that were, apparently, inside of the Cattleman., I don't know whether it would be possible for you to help me out or not. I disassembled the gun but those two pieces (a plumber and an spring) came out from the trigger zone not belonging to the gate, because I didn't disassemble it. Fortunately I have both of them but I don't have the slightest clue about how to assemble them if there are any pieces like that. And unfortunately the diagram doesn't show it... Thanks in advice.
Hello, The same thing happened to mine. the original Colts had a spring to the backside of the Hand, Uberti clones have a plunger and coiled spring held in the frame by a very tiny flathead screw that keeps pressure applied to the Hand and doesnt ruffle collars at Colt. Remove your backstrap and you will see the tiny screw to the left of the hammer if frame is in upright position that im referencing. Midway USA has the Hand Springs and Plungers and also has the Wolf spring kits.
Honest question since I own a Uberti 1873 Cattleman II in .357 - Do you prefer the wire sear spring or the flkat version that is more traditional? Which do you feel will last longer?
One thing that I like about the SA revolvers is they're very easy to customize. Even when it comes down to the little mechanical components.
Btw, it would have been nice if you would have measured the amount of force required to cock the hammer before and after as well.
From Aldo Uberti, Italian founder of a factory that manufactures high-quality replicas of 19th century revolvers, carbines, and rifles, as well as cartridge revolvers, single-shot rifles, and lever-action rifles.
Hello, I have an Uberti Cattlema and I'm having troubles with some short of plumber and spring that don't belong to the gate but that were, apparently, inside of the Cattleman., I don't know whether it would be possible for you to help me out or not. I disassembled the gun but those two pieces (a plumber and an spring) came out from the trigger zone not belonging to the gate, because I didn't disassemble it. Fortunately I have both of them but I don't have the slightest clue about how to assemble them if there are any pieces like that. And unfortunately the diagram doesn't show it...
Thanks in advice.
Hello, The same thing happened to mine. the original Colts had a spring to the backside of the Hand, Uberti clones have a plunger and coiled spring held in the frame by a very tiny flathead screw that keeps pressure applied to the Hand and doesnt ruffle collars at Colt. Remove your backstrap and you will see the tiny screw to the left of the hammer if frame is in upright position that im referencing. Midway USA has the Hand Springs and Plungers and also has the Wolf spring kits.
@@miljeep66 we managed to solve the problem, thanks for your advice!
🙏
i was looking to upgrade the internals on my uberti for competition shooting what do yall recommend?
I call it The Dirty-Berti
Honest question since I own a Uberti 1873 Cattleman II in .357 - Do you prefer the wire sear spring or the flkat version that is more traditional? Which do you feel will last longer?
I prefer the wire spring. Either is ok though. I have heard that the flat spring breaks more often.
@@hansenkun thanks. I’m going to try one. I’ve gone through three flat ones in two revolvers in about 1,000 rds each.
Which set did you get (sku number?) I see a couple listed on midway
Product number 672474
I’m here because my bolt/sear spring just broke. Midway is out of stock. So the wait begins.🤷♂️
Pretty sure it is actually ooh-bear-tea
Disappointed - you disassembled the revolver so quickly (speed up) that I didn't follow the beginning.
Man, don't EVER change the music....