Picked up a T/C .54 cal White Mountain carbine

by brionic @, Tuesday, July 24, 2012, 19:00 (4303 days ago)

After all the good advice you offered, I looked around and found a White Mountain carbine at Cherrys for $95, with the condition described at "It looks like it's been fired once and improperly cleaned. All that's in the barrel is dust".

It arrived today and I think it was a good purchase. I think they used some salesmanship on me, though, as it appears to have been fired quite a bit, and the barrel was full of crud. The pseudo-case colored lock is missing a thumbnail sized section of finish, and the hammer needs attention at the "cup", where it has rolled.

I took it apart, cleaned a huge amount of crud out of and off the barrel, outside in the sunlight where I could see significant freckling on the sights and across the top of the barrel. Barrel discharge was flaky, grainy, and sludgy. The lock assembly was full of shmutz as well. After cleaning everything, I used boiling water from my favorite electric kettle to rinse, hand dried, and left everything in the scorching Iowa sun to dry for a few minutes before oiling 'em up. The barrel needs more work, but not today.

The trigger is heavy, and I see a few surfaces that will benefit from light stoning.

The rifle throws to my shoulder nicely. With the shorter barrel and octagon to round profile, the balance point is about half way between the lock and rear sight.

Overall, it seems like a fair deal so far. Despite the condition not being as advertised, it's still pretty good, and I intend to hunt with it, so as long as it shoots reliably and accurately, a few dings and bruises don't bother me. I have a jug of .54 minie ball type bullets and a few pounds of 2F crying out for use, but it will have to wait until our medical issue is clarified.

Thanks for the tips!

If the barrel IS toast, you can always find a replacement/up

by Rob Leahy ⌂ @, Prescott, Arizona, Tuesday, July 24, 2012, 19:08 (4303 days ago) @ brionic

grade at track of the Wolf...

--
Of the Troops & For the Troops

BP bbls can be remarkably tolerant of 'freckling' ---

by John Meeker @, After double-actions came on the market?, Tuesday, July 24, 2012, 20:21 (4303 days ago) @ brionic

one trick i have used to polish things a bit, was after a good scrubbing out, to grease my patches with auto-finish rubbing compound. The cheapstuff from big box is ol: red for staters and the white to finish. Don't overdo it: just knock off the worst and mebbe see a bit of dull glean coming around.

When you clean it after shooting, run a patch of compound up and down a bit, and then finish it off with the regular stuff you use. Cheaper than a new bbl, and if you have knocked off the worst of it, a good tough greased patch will continue to minutely smooth it out.

just a thought. The breech end of my .40 cal Mountain squirrel rifle looked pretty bad when I pulled the plug, but a decade later it still shoots better than I can hold it.ybthw

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