Colt Army Special - Cleaning
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- Опубликовано: 1 мар 2022
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Thats a nice, quality pistol. You keep up the regular maintenence, and it will last for generations to come. Take care of your equipment, and your equipment will take care of you.
I don't like using Ballistol as a solvent. It should be used as a lubricant since its main ingredient is mineral oil. Hoppe's #9 is the best solvent for removing grime/oil/dirt.
everyone's got an opinion on stuff like that
When I see these antique Colts that have the "C" shaped scroll around the grip screw on the bakelite grips, I wonder if that is supposed to be the letter "C" for "Colt" or it is just a coincidence it is shaped that way. I assume it must have been intentional though.
They are a very distinctive look.
Those old Colts are nice. I pulled my old Colts out and I think they do have a tighter lockup at the point of firing than most guns even my s&ws. Maybe I should favor them more. Good video!
Was there ever a plunger with the cylinder release spring on the Army Special? The Detective Special was manufactured many, many years later.
I researched the hell out of that and found a lot of people in chat forums saying there was no plunger in their examples. Some were very clean mint examples that did not appear to ever have been apart. An exploded diagram directly from colt shows one. Both of mine army and officer, had none.
When putting the side plate on you want to pull back on the cylinder release so that the hole in the back side of it drops down over the projecting rod of the latch pin. Once it does, the side plate should go on.
Thanks for the tip.
I'll be cleaning my 1910 tomorrow that I picked up today.
How did it turn out? Is it a good shooter?
"Where are all these hairs come from?" ....awesome comments
The dog man, the dog.
Nice video man! I have a 1930 Detective Special but the screw that locks the cylinder is absolutely stucked and I don't really wanna f*** it up. Might just give up and take it to a competent gunsmith
If it doesn’t NEED to come apart….leave it stuck…..its been that way for almost 100 years.
@@MilsurpGarage The gun clearly has seen some use. I just wanna make sure the internals are clean for good.