SW CQB 45
Member
Howdy
I bought me a 1980s Ruger Speed Six. It was in good condition and shot decent for a heavy trigger press (Have a Wolff spring kit on order)
it had 40 years of grunge built up in corners that took some elbow grease to remove. I can feel drag on cylinder rotation.... so it must be dirty, grimy etc inside the cylinder.
The cylinder will not come apart. My guess, someone in the past used loctite (maybe red) on the ejector rod.
Since cylinder rotation is counter clockwise... its reverse thread and heavy heat from a heat gun and penetrating oil have been unsuccessful. I have used wet leather and vice grips on the ejector rod in and it spins on the leather.
The ejector rod end is .250" in diameter with the knurled area at .255"
any other tricks or tools that might help me get this apart with zero damage?
the last image is a red circle on my guess where the ejector rod and extractor thread together. I got it hot to the point of needing gloves and no dice on loosening.
TIA
I bought me a 1980s Ruger Speed Six. It was in good condition and shot decent for a heavy trigger press (Have a Wolff spring kit on order)
it had 40 years of grunge built up in corners that took some elbow grease to remove. I can feel drag on cylinder rotation.... so it must be dirty, grimy etc inside the cylinder.
The cylinder will not come apart. My guess, someone in the past used loctite (maybe red) on the ejector rod.
Since cylinder rotation is counter clockwise... its reverse thread and heavy heat from a heat gun and penetrating oil have been unsuccessful. I have used wet leather and vice grips on the ejector rod in and it spins on the leather.
The ejector rod end is .250" in diameter with the knurled area at .255"
any other tricks or tools that might help me get this apart with zero damage?
the last image is a red circle on my guess where the ejector rod and extractor thread together. I got it hot to the point of needing gloves and no dice on loosening.
TIA


