I was there a year later, November 1980. Very impressed with John's knowledge and teaching methods. Both he and Don (Vivenzio) were very patient, and always tried to answer my incessant questions.
What? No Smith & Wesson rebound slide spring tool. Probably the most important tool if you work on Smith & Wessons. Brownells #080-666-000AQ
The one piece of advice I haven't heard form the gallery is for the OP to contact S&W to see about 1) returning the weapon for correction & 2) ask them if he can attend one of their armorer schools. It appears to me that he is about to do more damage that he is trying to fix. Hopefully this won't be the case.
Jim
man that is one of the worst looking stars ive seen in quite some time...
From my limited knowledge, I think you have a point. I'd still try the RIG next.How can it be the ratchet when I can place another yoke in the gun, get a cylinder end shake measurement of.... .002 and the problem is solved?
Along with your other checks, you might also take a look at the interior of the yoke, just in front of the yoke barrel. This 1/4" opening that the extractor rod passes through often harbors burrs, or is very tight.
If you don't have a reamer, a new 1/4" drill bit rotated by hand will confirm that it is free from obstructions or burrs. You may see a corresponding shiny "ring" on your extractor rod if it is rubbing while rotating inside this opening.
While .001" of gage is restrictive (end shake), I doubt that issues with the yoke could cause enough restriction on proper rotation to affect the SA trigger pull to the degree you describe.
I would agree with the consensus that one or more of the ratchets may be "long", not cut sufficiently, or cut improperly. Have you tried substituting a slightly narrower hand than the one in the gun? This might not solve the issue, but could indicate that one or more of the ratchets are to blame, without further damage, or removal of material.
From my limited knowledge, I think you have a point. I'd still try the RIG next.
The problem seems to be the face of the ratchets hitting the recoil plate ever so slightly.
Because the yoke is different and will be slightly different dimensionally. If there's slightly more yoke/bore clearance the cylinder can move enough in relation to the hand window to let the hand slide by the ratchet without dragging.
Yokes are "select fit". That's why they're not sold as a replacement part. They basically have a box of yokes and they try them in the frame and the first one that fits the frame acceptably gets used.
How long you gonna keep looking in the kitchen for your quarter?
I do understand what you are saying, but I notice that the way a professional gunsmith "fixed" my 25 didn't work, yet a great grease did fix it, permanently. You are trying very hard to true up the relationship between your recoil plate (a part of the frame!) and your ratchet. Maybe I misunderstand, but I think that you don't know whether the recoil plate is off, or the yoke is off, or some of the ratchet faces are off. Even when you think you have "fixed" the gun, if you ever do, you may STILL not know what was wrong, or what other looseness you may have introduced to OTHER parts of the mechanism, like, just for a frinstance, the lockup or distance from the recoil plate of the chambers that WERE NOT displaying a "problem." Don't forget, this is a MINOR friction problem - one pound of DA pull variation over six chambers. A PROFESSIONAL gunsmith, one who does this for a living, would jump at the chance to get the gun out the door to a satisfied customer if he could do this with one relube using $.017 worth of lube.RIG is not a proper mechanical fix, even though it may fix the problem. It's a band-aid of sorts.
While I do appreciate the suggestion I prefer to solve this problem the way a professional gunsmith would solve it.
I can put stop leak in my radiator and that stuff works. But the radiator is still broken.