I'm trying to fix up an H&R 929 .22 revolver. It fails to fire once or twice each time I load up nine rounds.
It wasn't a super great gun when it was made, so I was told by a local gun shop owner that his gunsmith won't even work on them. Not enough payout for the time it takes, I guess.
Anyway, I've cleaned it throughly. I've checked the timing. It's marking the casings in the right spot. I'm not great at IDing light strikes, but I suppose that's what's happening. I switched ammo brands, and that helped a bit, but didn't solve the problem.
So my next step is ordering a new main spring. I did that today, so my next range visit should reveal something.
But my question is what's the next step? I'm assuming that if the main spring replacement doesn't work then I'd assume that the firing pin/striker is worn down. (Sorry if I'm butchering the the terminology, REALLY new to gunsmithing here. Let's just say the part of the gun that makes contact with the back of the casing). Is it safe to "sharpen" it?
Obviously, I don't want it sharp enough to puncture the casing. But can a run file down it a couple times to narrow it, therefore focusing the force on a smaller area?
Or is this idea something that will end up blowing up in my face... literally?
Thanks in advance for any advice.
It wasn't a super great gun when it was made, so I was told by a local gun shop owner that his gunsmith won't even work on them. Not enough payout for the time it takes, I guess.
Anyway, I've cleaned it throughly. I've checked the timing. It's marking the casings in the right spot. I'm not great at IDing light strikes, but I suppose that's what's happening. I switched ammo brands, and that helped a bit, but didn't solve the problem.
So my next step is ordering a new main spring. I did that today, so my next range visit should reveal something.
But my question is what's the next step? I'm assuming that if the main spring replacement doesn't work then I'd assume that the firing pin/striker is worn down. (Sorry if I'm butchering the the terminology, REALLY new to gunsmithing here. Let's just say the part of the gun that makes contact with the back of the casing). Is it safe to "sharpen" it?
Obviously, I don't want it sharp enough to puncture the casing. But can a run file down it a couple times to narrow it, therefore focusing the force on a smaller area?
Or is this idea something that will end up blowing up in my face... literally?
Thanks in advance for any advice.