Barrel to Arbor Dimensions

Started by gunboat57, January 08, 2025, 10:52:02 AM

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gunboat57

I'm doing some research on Colt's conversion and open top cartridge revolvers.

Can someone with an original 1860 Army percussion revolver or an original Richards I or II cartridge revolver measure the centerline to centerline distance from the arbor to the barrel?

Can someone measure the arbor to barrel centerline to centerline distance on a modern Uberti 1860 Army percussion revolver?

If this information is already compiled somewhere, I'd appreciate a link.

Thanks in advance for any help!
"We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give."

gunboat57

Here's how I find the barrel to arbor center to center distance.  Measure inside top of barrel to inside bottom of arbor hole.  Then measure inside bottom of barrel to inside top of arbor hole.  Add the two measurements together and divide by two.

My Uberti OT shown comes out to .526".
"We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give."

Coffinmaker

:)  Gunboat  ;)

I am actually of no help.  I don't own an original of any of your subjects nor do I own a sample example of a current Uberti 1860 Army.  However:

WHY??

gunboat57

"Why?"
OK, fair question.  I have two reasons for asking.

I have an Armi San Paolo "Navy" 44 Sheriff's model.  Not sure when it was made.  But I'm measuring a full .020" difference between the axes of the chambers and the barrel axis!  I'd like to confirm that in modern C & B revolvers like an Uberti the chambers and barrel are closer to being coaxial.

Second reason is more out of curiosity and a quest for useless knowledge.  On the original Richards I conversions some revolvers used the original rebated cylinders which were bored out for the .44 cartridge.  I'd like to know how thin the metal was over the chambers in the rebated portion of the cylinder.  I know the chamber diameters and I know the diameter of the rebated part of the cylinder.  I still need to know the center to center distance from the arbor to the chambers.  Next best thing would be C to C distance of arbor to barrel axis on an original Richards or original 1860 Army.

I know that Colt began making new rebated cylinders for the conversion revolvers and those cylinders were a bit larger in diameter.  And the Open Top revolvers did away with the rebated part altogether.
"We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give."

dangt

This would be best measured on the cylinder itself.  The dimension you want would be half the distance between two opposing chambers.  I am assuming the chambers are not diverging and are parallel to bore axis. Last comment was in regard to the quest for how thin over chambers at the breech.

Coffinmaker

 :) Gunboat ;)

I wouldn't go so far as to call it "useless" information.  Well, not completely anyway.  Knowing the  center to center axis of the Barrel Bore and the Arbor Bore might enable one to determine if a modern reproduction barrel assembly can be fit to an original Colt.  Which, depending on the condition of the barrel assemble found on a "found" original, might just be an option.

As far as the two objects being coaxial, your methodology is a mite flawed.  Whether or not barrel and chamber are "coaxial" is determined with an appropriate sized "range rod."  Although, it will require a somewhat specialized range rod as, as oft happenstance, the chamber bore is "other" than the barrel bore.  Go figure.  So, one needs a range rod the actual dimension of the "lands" but perhaps stepped down the last quarter inch to match the chamber, then said rod should enter the chambers without hiccups.  Mostly.

Now, provided you have an appropriate forcing cone at the barrel breach, even a slight miss-alignment is corrected by the forcing cone.  Usually.

Back to mostly useless trivia.  None of these measurements will actually answer most questions.  Modern replicants of Conversions, submitted by Uberti, the cylinders are actually larger than the original sample examples, because Uberti bowed to the clamoring masses whom wanted conversions chambered in 45 Colt.  The actual amount of meat at the breach end of period conversions is best measured from an "actual."  Same same determining the dimension at the breach of a modern replicant.

One you have those actual dimensions, you will proudly own a winning, or several winning, answers for Trivial Pursuit  ;D   Burma Shave

PS:  The remaining thickness of steel in a modern replicant, chambered .45 Colt, does not count as useful trivia.  Colt never chambered ANY conversion in .45   Colt conversions on the 1860 platform were chambered for .44 Colt, which was actually a heal based bullet that fit the 1860 mostly .45 bore.  Go Figure.

gunboat57

DangT, you're right.  Most useful measurement off of an original Richards conversion or 1860 percussion revolver would be chamber to opposite chamber.
But you brought up something I was wondering.  Did Colt have to bore the chambers slightly convergent front to rear when reworking a percussion cylinder?  The bottoms of the bolt notches had to have been paper thin or even cut away sometimes.

 
"We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give."

gunboat57

Coffinmaker, just for fun I checked my Uberti 44 Special Open Top for "coaxiality" between barrel axis and chamber axes.  I used the arbor for my datum and was careful to measure on the lands in the barrel bore.

Happy to report that all axes were parallel and within a couple thousandths of being coaxial.  Must say I'm impressed with the quality of this revolver.
"We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give."

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