THE PILGRIM
Member
My Model 17 with added Target Hammer-Trigger and a little tuning is pretty smooth.
63 - 2 and a 4, 651, with no mods - not so much!
63 - 2 and a 4, 651, with no mods - not so much!
i still have a ruger lcr 22lr dao snubbie, but im unsure why. when shooting rapidly for practice (a 22lr bee swarm is how i would use any 22lr handgun for protection) one can short stroke the long trigger reset and thus bind the cylinder. thus the lcr isn’t particularly suitable for protection unless one overcomes the temptation to quickly let it rip. with a short sight radius and no single-action capability the lcr is not accurate enough to serve as an outdoors kit gun.Ruger Lcr or lcrx
Great trigger light weight
Oh I understand the rationale involved, I’m just surprised somebody hasn’t found a way to resolve the problem (dual firing pins? Heavier hammer? Different hammer geometry?). I’ve often wondered why mfrs do not put a dual firing pins in their firearms as a matter of course. Two pins, hitting at the same time on opposite sides of the rim should basically resolve the rim fire “ftf” thing.The heavy trigger on the 22 rimfire cartridge revolver is the result of the varying thickness/hardness of the 22 rimfire cases. The manufacturers of the ammunition cannot control this variable. To make a DA revolver reliable the firearm manufacturers install a heavy hammer/mainspring. I have tried to install a standard centerfire spring into a M-63 rendering the firearm unreliable in DA operation.
A bigger revolver maybe the solution. In the 80 I purchased a M-17/6" which can't recall any FF in DA. I sold it to a friend and purchased a M-63 to replace it. I found the M-17 too large for the female hand. At the time I was training ladies frequently in basic handgun marksmanship. The 63 has had a pot load of rounds fired in it.I’ve shot an old Single Six and a Bearcat for decades without issues, just really want a handy DA with a good trigger. I may just wind up with an older K22
Two point firing pins have been tried for over 100 years with no improvement in ignition issues. Savage used a two point firing pin in their Model 19 NRA Target rifle in 1919, mostly because of inconsistent priming issues with the rimfire ammunition of that period. Simple physics will tell you that distributing the force of the firing pin strike over two pins simply reduces the force applied to the rim by each.Oh I understand the rationale involved, I’m just surprised somebody hasn’t found a way to resolve the problem (dual firing pins? Heavier hammer? Different hammer geometry?). I’ve often wondered why mfrs do not put a dual firing pins in their firearms as a matter of course. Two pins, hitting at the same time on opposite sides of the rim should basically resolve the rim fire “ftf” thing.
.. I’ve often wondered why mfrs do not put a dual firing pins in their firearms as a matter of course. Two pins, hitting at the same time on opposite sides of the rim should basically resolve the rim fire “ftf” thing.
you original model 63 like mine is a collectors item. Pinned barrel, recessed cylinder, great little gun. But as we both experienced, it is only possible to do so much to reduce the trigger pull, and that is nowhere close to pleasant. All of the other brand copies are the same, hard to pull.I am the proud owner of a S&W Model 17 and a S&W Model 63. The Model 17 is an excellent revolver. Great trigger, 6 inch barrel is well balanced. Lots of fun to shoot.
The Model 63, on the other hand, not so much. I bought it in the early 80’s for my wife so that she would have a quality, stainless, reliable handgun to take to the range. I was most disappointed. The trigger pull was off the charts. The cylinder would often hang up between rounds, though not consistently which made the revolver completely unreliable. I took it to a local gun smith and had him do a “trigger job”. The gun came back in the same poor condition. I suspect the gunsmith either didn’t know what he was doing or did nothing and just took my money.
Anyway, the gun rests comfortably in the back of the gun safe, waiting to find a home as a shiny paper weight.
Cannon Master I
Good points. Because the 22s carbon up so quickly, there are only a few tricks to make them run longer without getting failures. We have more than a dozen 22 pistols, the semi autos we shoot suppressed most of the time, a half dozen of them.i still have a ruger lcr 22lr dao snubbie, but im unsure why. when shooting rapidly for practice (a 22lr bee swarm is how i would use any 22lr handgun for protection) one can short stroke the long trigger reset and thus bind the cylinder. thus the lcr isn’t particularly suitable for protection unless one overcomes the temptation to quickly let it rip. with a short sight radius and no single-action capability the lcr is not accurate enough to serve as an outdoors kit gun.
my s&w 317 alloy cylinder would faithfully heat-bind after 30ish steady range shots. my taurus 94 single- and double-action’s hard trigger pulls were both totally unworkable. these two revolvers are gone.
i have concluded that a 22lr handgun is best had as a single-action revolver (my several are by ruger) or as a top shelf semiauto pistol (mine is a ruger sr22).
I dryfire revolvers a lot and usually with no dummy rounds even in rimfires. It worked very well with S&W' 22lr's but a Taurus 22WMR would misfire often. I really don't think that there's such a thing as a reliable rimfire double action revolver trigger. I have been favorably impressed by my 32 Charter Arms Professional. I recently shot some cowboy action 110 grain 38 special loads that we're light recoiling. I often practice a two handed grip using both index fingers to pull the trigger. I prefer to shoot double action because I have lost gripping power due to an old hand injury.I put dummy rounds in and dry fire 2000 times. It makes a noticeable difference. I never had to change springs. Worked on all my J-Frames and worked very good on my 942 Taurus View attachment 765562
I was wondering when somebody would get around to Charter Arms. It may be heresy to say so, but my Pathfinder has an exceptionally smooth DA pull.One exception is the Charter Arms, they have a much better pull than the Smith and Wessons.