Coltdriver
New member
I recently picked up a beater Browning Baby. Looked like hades, rusted, cracked handle, generally a mess.
Brought it home, took it apart and totally cleaned it up. Used oil and steel wool to get the rust off. Bought some new grips.
Took it out today and fired about fourty rounds of Fiocci hard ball through it.
Worked very well until the last clip or so. Trigger started to get a bit sticky then the trigger quit releasing the striker.
Brought it home, took it apart and discovered that the mag safety was causing the problem. (there is a bar, hinged at the base of the handle and spring loaded that pivots about a 1/16th at the top and prevents the striker release from rotating down).
So I just took a pair of pliers and gently bent the piece of this bar that engages the magazine (which in turn pivots the bar backwards and opens the striker release to a deeper slot in the bar).
But I know that under the hammering of firing the gun that this little ear will eventually bend back again.
So I am wondering if there is a way for me to heat this bar up and dip it in somthing to harden the metal and prevent this from happening.
The little Browning is an excellent pocket gun, but making it reliable will be very important if I am going to ever carry it.
Any suggestions on a product, name, source or procedure that can be used to accomplish this???
Thanks in advance for your help.
Brought it home, took it apart and totally cleaned it up. Used oil and steel wool to get the rust off. Bought some new grips.
Took it out today and fired about fourty rounds of Fiocci hard ball through it.
Worked very well until the last clip or so. Trigger started to get a bit sticky then the trigger quit releasing the striker.
Brought it home, took it apart and discovered that the mag safety was causing the problem. (there is a bar, hinged at the base of the handle and spring loaded that pivots about a 1/16th at the top and prevents the striker release from rotating down).
So I just took a pair of pliers and gently bent the piece of this bar that engages the magazine (which in turn pivots the bar backwards and opens the striker release to a deeper slot in the bar).
But I know that under the hammering of firing the gun that this little ear will eventually bend back again.
So I am wondering if there is a way for me to heat this bar up and dip it in somthing to harden the metal and prevent this from happening.
The little Browning is an excellent pocket gun, but making it reliable will be very important if I am going to ever carry it.
Any suggestions on a product, name, source or procedure that can be used to accomplish this???
Thanks in advance for your help.