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10-26-2009, 10:50 PM
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HB Hammer on a 1905 Fourth Change Target
Recently I picked up a small set of humpback hammers that were being offered as a group. One was a centerfire K-frame hammer, so earlier today I swapped hammers on my M&P (1905 Fourth Change) Target model just to see what the result would look like.
Before:
After:
Oblique close-up, with oily thumbprint (!!!):
I'm not that sure I like either the functionality or the appearance of the overall configuration. I think HB hammers may look better on N-frames than K-frames. And since I have an inflexible tendon in my right thumb (Dupuytren's Contracture, very irritating on that digit), the extra fraction of an inch that I have to stretch up to contact the hammer spur puts it almost out of reach. That defeats the very concept of easy recocking that Douglas Wesson called out when he filed the hammer patent in 1937.
Cocked:
I'm not sure I think the profile of the gun looks any better when it is prepared to fire in single-action mode. I understand that we are talking performance rather than attractiveness here, but the gap between the frame and cocked HB hammer is kind of unattractive compared to the closer approach of the standard hammer.
This was an interesting swap-out for me because the sear that came with the HB hammer proved to need some work. Here's a photo that shows the tip of the sear will not be engaged by the trigger on a double action pull; the bevel on the trigger pushes the sear in and the hammer will not move when the cylinder rotates. I worked on the surface above the pivot point and improved the lower contact picture, but it still needs more work. I'll get it eventually.
I'll acknowledge in closing that this gun could never have shipped with a humpback hammer, because it left the factory in 1935 and the first HB hammers became available in 1937. I also know that the gun shipped without a Wesson grip adapter; the one on the gun now was added at a later date. So in this configuration the gun has two features -- hammer and adapter -- that were legitimate options or accessories for later production of this model but were not on this gun when it shipped.
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David Wilson
Last edited by DCWilson; 10-27-2009 at 10:35 AM.
Reason: Clarifications
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10-27-2009, 10:38 AM
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Very cool post. I have to agree that I like the HB on the N's much better than on the K's. It takes away from the clean look of the FH hammer and to me it looks to large on the K's, almost like it is the "wrong" hammer for the gun...
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Richard
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10-27-2009, 11:04 AM
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My heresy-
The looks don't bother me much, though it does have a 'strange' air to it, maybe because they are seldom seen on the K.
I just don't like them- on any gun. Maybe this old dog was just too old by the time I encountered them to learn new tricks, but they spook me.
I had a number of decades behind me cocking hammers that had some type of "dip" in them that the thumb could be forced down into. I always had strong hands- Dad had me cutting wire with a tiny pair of Kleins when I was 8, so it was no trouble dealing with a regular hammer. The hump back just doesn't give me that "positive control" feeling.
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Lee Jarrett
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10-27-2009, 02:13 PM
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David,
Geez, that awful old turkey of a 1905 Forth Change again! You can't polish a ****, you know?
I can't believe how dirty the lockwork of that gun is...
I kinda like, no I love humpback hammers. I might have to get one of those one day.
Best,
Michael
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N-Frame-itis THERE IS NO CURE!
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10-27-2009, 02:59 PM
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David
Would you be so kind as to post a picture of the original hammer, in
the lockwork ? I'd like to compare it to the one posted above, of the
HB hammer in the lockwork.
Something looks way out of position for the sear on the HB hammer.
I almost looks as though that sear is for a different-design trigger.
Later, Mike Priwer
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10-27-2009, 03:25 PM
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Very nice David. Personally I love the look of it.
How does it shoot??
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Dave Ballantyne
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10-27-2009, 05:11 PM
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It also looks like the humback sticks up too high when fully forward to be able to sight the gun prior to cocking or staging. (like on a single action army). Is that true, or does it just look that way because of the angle?
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10-27-2009, 05:31 PM
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Chris
Thinking about that, it almost looks like its an N-frame hammer.
Later, Mike Priwer
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10-27-2009, 05:57 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mikepriwer
David
Would you be so kind as to post a picture of the original hammer, in
the lockwork ? I'd like to compare it to the one posted above, of the
HB hammer in the lockwork.
Something looks way out of position for the sear on the HB hammer.
I almost looks as though that sear is for a different-design trigger.
Later, Mike Priwer
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Glad to oblige. Apologies for not maintaining exact size parity and the same angle of view.
First, the original photo of the HB hammer:
The original hammer installed, with the original sear still attached:
The two hammers side by side:
When the HB hammer and its sear were in position but not under mainspring tension, pulling the trigger would both rotate the cylinder and push the hammer back in the regular double-action movement. With the mainspring in place and tightened, the trigger would contact the sear and simply push it out of the way as the trigger arm continued its upward travel.
As an experiment, I swapped sears. The sear from the original hammer functioned perfectly on the HB hammer, so I just left it in the gun.
I'm not sure what is wrong with the bad sear. It seems to be dimensioned exactly the same as the functioning sear, but there are some working marks at the tip that make me think that in its history someone adjusted it in a way that makes it inappropriate for the gun I was trying to fit it to now. To my untrained eye, it would appear that the sear could be rendered usable by removing a little steel from the back of the sear above the pivot point; that would let the toe of the sear move forward another .01-.02" under the sear spring pressure, which I think is all that is needed to let the trigger arm engage it properly.
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David Wilson
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10-27-2009, 06:13 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cgt4570
It also looks like the humback sticks up too high when fully forward to be able to sight the gun prior to cocking or staging. (like on a single action army). Is that true, or does it just look that way because of the angle?
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It's the angle. When you hold the gun at arm's length with the hammer at rest and align the front blade in the rear sight notch, the surface of the hammer rises to slightly above the bottom of the rear sight notch. It doesn't give you a full sight picture, but it's enough to line up the top of the rear sight and the top of the front blade.
If you set the HB hammer and standard hammer atop one another, the only place where the profiles don't match is the spur.
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David Wilson
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10-27-2009, 06:18 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by merlindrb
Very nice David. Personally I love the look of it.
How does it shoot??
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Haven't shot it yet with the replacement hammer, but plan to soon. Range report coming in the not too distant future.
I did shoot it in its original configuration two or three weeks ago. As expected, the gun hit pretty much where I pointed it, which given my aging eyes and shaky arm was not always the center of the target. But at least I stayed on the paper.
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David Wilson
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10-27-2009, 06:25 PM
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Cool experiment Dave, though personally I like the looks of the speed aka "fishhook" hammer better
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10-27-2009, 06:27 PM
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David
That was going to be my next suggestion - swap sears. What's
happening is that the sear is not positioned properly. As you
noted, a bit of metal needs to be removed, from just about its
pivot pin, so that it can rotate forward just a bit. Then it will engage
the trigger properly.
Personally, I would send it to someone like Dave Chicoine, and
let him fit it . Otherwise, there may be other issues develop, and
once metal is removed, it can't be replaced !
Regards, Mike Priwer
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10-27-2009, 06:29 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kobold_27
David,
Geez, that awful old turkey of a 1905 Forth Change again! You can't polish a ****, you know?
I can't believe how dirty the lockwork of that gun is...
I kinda like, no I love humpback hammers. I might have to get one of those one day.
Best,
Michael
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Kvetch, kvetch, kvetch! You're always so negative!
For those who don't know what's going on here, the sparkling clean lockwork you seen in the interior photos of this gun is Michael's work. Whether it's his gun or somebody else's, any gun that is in Michael's hands for more than a couple of days gets cleaner as time goes by. I think he has elves in his safe that work when everyone else is asleep.
Michael, if we can set up a range day in San Diego sometime soon, I'll bring along this one and the .38/44 so we can perforate some paper. I'll practice with the hammer and try to get over the quasi-goofy feeling it has in my hand right now.
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David Wilson
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10-29-2009, 06:58 PM
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HBH on 1905 4 th target.
This 1905 4th target is much too early to have been original but it does put a smile on your face when you cock the HBH.
Jim Goldthwaite # 2059
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