Thompson Center single shot pistol/rifle

First things first:
Midway has SSK-50 frames in stock. I would be all over one except you can't have just a frame shipped to CA. Single shots have to be a complete pistol with a 6" or greater barrel.

Also, I just bought a G2 with .41Mag and .327Mag barrels. As I happen to shoot both of those calibers, it works out pretty well. Now I just have to wait it to be delivered to my local FFL.
 
First things first:
Midway has SSK-50 frames in stock. I would be all over one except you can't have just a frame shipped to CA. Single shots have to be a complete pistol with a 6" or greater barrel.

Also, I just bought a G2 with .41Mag and .327Mag barrels. As I happen to shoot both of those calibers, it works out pretty well. Now I just have to wait it to be delivered to my local FFL.

I had a few SAE (different from SSE, but same theory) handguns sent to an intermediary FFL in AZ who removed the DA sear and then sent into CA. I'd suppose they would also do the same re the SSK. Midway sends them the frame, you send them a barrel.
 
There's a listing for the new frames on the SSK website. It says "dealers only" and "must buy five frames".
Price listed is $2125, but no explanation if that's per frame or for an order of five frames. :confused: (I hope it's for an order of five!!!)
Oh yes, and of course, they're out of stock! :rolleyes:
But, there is a silly picture of a new one with a cheesy plastic AR style stock attached. Oh well....

And there's this statement:
"This receiver is compatible with Thompson Center/SSK G1/G2 Contender® barrels post TC Generation 1. The SSK-50 receiver is not compatible with TC Generation 1 barrels. Due to other barrel manufacture's variation from TC dimensional specifications, we can not assure fitment to these manufacture's barrels."

As someone who shot Contenders in the last century, when dinosaurs and IHMSA were alive and well, I have no idea what they're talking about. (If by Generation 1, they mean the cool ones with the cougar on the side, then I'm not interested in this new one.)
But, I do know this: When Warren Center was running the company, every barrel was guaranteed to fit every frame. If not, they went out of their way to make it right, no questions asked.
That company was run by nice folks!!

As for the OP question:
Why were Thompson Center single shots discontinued?
My "wise guy" answer is, "Because they don't take a 30 round magazine."
 
...And there's this statement:
"This receiver is compatible with Thompson Center/SSK G1/G2 Contender® barrels post TC Generation 1. The SSK-50 receiver is not compatible with TC Generation 1 barrels. Due to other barrel manufacture's variation from TC dimensional specifications, we can not assure fitment to these manufacture's barrels."

As someone who shot Contenders in the last century, when dinosaurs and IHMSA were alive and well, I have no idea what they're talking about. (If by Generation 1, they mean the cool ones with the cougar on the side, then I'm not interested in this new one.)
But, I do know this: When Warren Center was running the company, every barrel was guaranteed to fit every frame. If not, they went out of their way to make it right, no questions asked.
That company was run by nice folks!!

If you ever talked with J.D.Jones on the phone (and got the phone slammed in your ear), you would immediately understand that things are different now!

Jones does do a great job of maintaining HIS tolerances, but to heck with any other set!

Ivan
 
Referring back to my earlier post, the whole generation 1 vs generation 2 thing is a retroactive perspective that overlooks the era of the original Contender design.
Back then, if you were familiar with the particular model, you understood that there were a number of important variations.
The "original" Contender did not have an adjustable trigger stop, did not have the "easy open" frame, and had the one-piece bolt in the barrel underlug.
The adjustable trigger stop and the two piece bolt were helpful inprovements. Together they consituted a new version of the Contender.
As the gun was being used for heavier recoiling cartridges operating sometimes at high pressure, the "easy open" action helped address case set-back which could make opening the action more of a challenge. The change was accompanied with a new trigger profile which was not to everyone's liking.
Also, this change introduced spare parts logistical issues.
At the same time, T/C made changes to the hammer mounted safety lever and the firing pin selector. Fortunately, hammers were all interchangeable, but it was yet another spare part headache!
Then, there were the important sight variations. The original rear sight was mounted with two screws. A design change involving a four screw mount was accompanied with a new, proprietary scope mount and line of optics. For the first time ever, a handgun manufacturer offered a complete (and high quality!) handgun-mount-optic system. Up to then, the only game in town was the Bushnell Phantom, a mediocre scope (well, it was a Bushnell, after all) of low magnification (1.3 & 2x) and plain cross reticle, recoil resistent all the way up to the 38 Special. Plus, the mount was a "gunsmith only" drill and tap affair. The T/C system allowed the end-user to install and configure scope or sights to their own needs.
Other sight variations were to come. And, in the midst of all this were the many barrel variations: original short octagonals, the 10" (octagonal or bull), and "Super 14" bull barrel.
The short-lived Armor Alloy II (there was no Armor Alloy I…weird!), added a new problem: for the first time, there was a Contender variation that violated the idea of across-the-board barrel & frame interchangeability.
Many of us were not amused, and the Armor Alloy II variation was mostly rejected marketwise, and subsquently discontinued.

Fortunately, T/C never lost sight of their heritage, as underscored by their Steve Herrett commemorative Contender (see attached image). While I am not a fan of most "commemoratives", this one was tasteful yet still utilitarian. And, for a couple hundred bucks over the price of the standard model, still within the budget of many shooters and collectors.

Anyhow, the bottom line is, to retroactively throw all of these variations into one heading under "Generation 1", is, to me, a gross oversimplification, to say the least.

By the time the so-called "Generation 2" version came along, it just appeared to me to be a "mini-me" (sorry, Austin Powers) version of the Encore.
The grace, handling, balance, and yes, style of the "real" Contender was over.

Requiescat in pace
 

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