pantannojack
US Veteran
If getting a J Frame hammer bob'd is it advisable to up the spring tension for reliable ignition?
If getting a J Frame hammer bob'd is it advisable to up the spring tension for reliable ignition?
If getting a J Frame hammer bob'd is it advisable to up the spring tension for reliable ignition?
I've bobbed maybe half a dozen hammers. Never altered my factory mainspring. NO problems.
S&W, on the other hand, UNNECESSARILY increased factory spring strength on a special order (NY-1) of DAO Model 60 revolvers. BIG MISTAKE. Before they could correct this wholly unnecessary move, they upset the Rodman's Neck crowd or their bosses to the point that the contract was cancelled.
You could probably do a search of old threads and find a detailed technical discussion of why increased spring power is unnecessary. Has something to do with the increased speed of the lighter hammer and the kinetic energy imparted on impact. I don't fully understand it, because I don't understand why KE is holy, and momentum isn't.
Anyway, my limited experience tells me what I need to know, and I understand that the NYPD experimented with a few dozen revolvers and observed the same thing.
Bob away!
BTW, do not ignore zzclancy's post. My experience was with older J frames, as was NYPD's. Nothing wrong with applying his test to older guns, but he can tell you that it is particularly necessary with new ones.
Removing weight from a rotating item such as the hammer will allow it to accelerate faster.
If it accelerates faster, the velocity at primer impact will be higher.
the impact force = 1/2 M(Vsquared)
since the velocity is squared, the force increases much faster than the force being decreased by the weight reduction.
SO,,, in the end, bobbing a hammer should create BETTER ignition,,
(strictly scientifically/mathematically speaking)
In the real world,, as Mr Spock would say,, "It is my best guess,,"
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This is my understanding. In fact, if you lighten the hammer you can lighten the mainspring tension and still get the same reliable ignition because you don't need as much mainspring drive to run the lighter hammer.Removing weight from a rotating item such as the hammer will allow it to accelerate faster.
If it accelerates faster, the velocity at primer impact will be higher.
the impact force = 1/2 M(Vsquared)
since the velocity is squared, the force increases much faster than the force being decreased by the weight reduction.
SO,,, in the end, bobbing a hammer should create BETTER ignition,,
(strictly scientifically/mathematically speaking)
In the real world,, as Mr Spock would say,, "It is my best guess,,"
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As long as it came up..........
The NYPD has just about the worst record I know of in their "dumbing down" guns rather than spending the money, time, trouble and effort to properly train their Officers!! They did the exact same thing with their Glocks by adding the 12 pound trigger after some of their Offices shot themselves with the 5.5lb. standard triggers. Instead of re-training the Officers not to be so careless and teach them better techniques, they more than doubled the trigger pull to the point that many of their Officer's can't hit the broad side of a barn!
I was friendly with one of their training officers and still friends with yet another. I have been to the NYPD shooting facility at Rodman's Island and I have shot their guns and they are ridiculous! If an Officer can not be trained to safely carry a pistol with a 5 1/2lb. trigger then I suggest he should not be on the job until he/she is capable. In many instances there are shootings involving the NYPD and the round count is so outrages in relationship to hits to stop a threat - it's embarrassing!
Off Duty , they still cannot carry anything but a smaller back up gun (approved by NYPD) that has the same ridiculous trigger pull. If they get caught with a gun or are involved in a shooting with a gun that does not conform to their spec's, - immediate dismissal.
As long as it came up..........
The NYPD has just about the worst record I know of in their "dumbing down" guns rather than spending the money, time, trouble and effort to properly train their Officers!!
This is an excellent point, as OP only specified J-frame, not caliber. Rimfires are different beasts and not as amenable to this type of tuning, compared to centerfire.I am quite interested all aspects of tuning revolvers, including the relationship between hammer mass and mainspring tension. I find the discussions about mass vs speed and kinetic energy vs momentum to be useful, but I think there is a key factor which is not always considered, which is the behavior of primers.
For reasons that I don't claim to understand, centerfire primers like to be hit very sharply, and if the hammer is moving very fast, it does not need a huge amount of energy to ignite centerfire primers. Rimfire behaves quite differently. Rimfire rounds need to be crushed with some substantial mass to ignite reliably.
So the rule of thumb, which I mostly learned from this forum, is that centerfire guns generally work just fine with a lightened hammer, and rimfire guns do not. Clearly, the physics of spring force and hammer energy cannot fully explain this phenomenon.
This difference between centerfire and rimfire is well illustrated by the aftermarket hammers made by Apex Technologies for competition revolvers. Their hammers for centerfire double action revolvers are very skeletonized, while their rimfire hammer is called the "mass driver" and has extra mass. I have no connection to them, but I do respect their expertise with competition revolvers.