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waterman
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Ballard .22 Rf
Mar 3rd, 2005 at 11:11pm
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One of those followed me home 4 or 5 years ago & has set in the closet a good bit.  Once upon a time it was a Marlin Ballard, with original DST and nothing fancy about the action. SN is in the 28XXX range. It has a barrel marked "Eric Johnson" and a Fecker scope.  The stock is rather characterless walnut, set up for offhand shooting, with an aluminum "sorta swiss" buttplate.  The fore-end has a palm rest but also has a strange aluminum end cap.  And the lever is a cast aluminium affair with lots of places for all your fingers.   

Can anyone tell me about this rifle?  What kind of Marlin Ballard it was and when it was made?  Who was/is Eric Johnson?  And can anyone guess at the vintage of the remodel?
  
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marlinguy
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Ballards may be weaker,
but they sure are neater!

Re: Ballard .22 Rf
Reply #1 - Mar 4th, 2005 at 12:44am
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I believe Eric Johson was a barrelmaker. I've seen guns with his name on the barrel before. Is the firing pin on your Ballard a rectangular shaped pin? You should be able to see the shape under the hammer. Is the extractor the type that slides straight back on a round shaft bored into the receiver on the left side, or is it an extractor that pivots open on the action screw? If it slides on a shaft, it's a Ballard #3 action. If not, it's probably a #2 Hunter, or other action. 
Do the double set triggers serial number to the action? If so, and if it's a #3 receiver, it might well have been a #F, as they often had set triggers.
  
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PETE
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Re: Ballard .22 Rf
Reply #2 - Mar 4th, 2005 at 5:02pm
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Waterman,

  Yes. Eric Johnson was a barrel maker of some repute many years ago. I wish I could recall exactly where I saw it but someone has some of the shop books Eric kept and it might be possible to find out when he worked on your gun.

  Aha! Found it! If you will send $10 and the name & serial number of the action to Rudi Prusok, the ASSRA archivist, he will search Eric's shop notes for you. There's no guarantee it will be in there, but worth the chance if you're interested.

PETE
  
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waterman
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Re: Ballard .22 Rf
Reply #3 - Mar 5th, 2005 at 10:39pm
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Got the Ballard out of the closet.  The firing pin looks to be round, not rectangular. Maybe a lot newer than the rest of the action.  Might it have been redone when this was converted to a .22 RF gallery rifle? 

And the extractor is one that slides straight back on the left side of the receiver.  I do not see any numbers on the DST.  They are case hardened and look a lot cleaner and better preserved than the case hardening on the rest of the receiver.  The DSTs fit the action perfectly.  I assume they are original and are in better condition because they are inside the action.

There is a part of the action where a tang sight would fit that is not as worn as the rest of the action.  When the Ballard was in its original condition, it apparently sported a tang sight.  Now there are no iron sights, only scope blocks.

The stock and particularly the fore-end are OK but somehow just look out of place on this old girl.  Aluminum inlays?  What's next?  The whole thing looks like 1950s moderne.

I got the rifle from a couple of hicks who were using it to shoot rats in a barn.  They were shooting .22 shorts or BB caps and screwed up the forward end of the chamber with lead deposits until a standard .22 LR would not chamber.  The abuse of the rifle irritated me badly.  I gave them some $ on the spot and took the rifle home.  My gunsmith got the crap out of the chamber and now the rifle seems to shoot like a target rifle, but I still need to give it a long day or 2 at the range.
  
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vigillinus
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Re: Ballard .22 Rf
Reply #4 - Jul 29th, 2005 at 11:42am
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Johnson was famous maker of .22 LR match rifle  barrels in 1930s and 40s, usually seen on 52 Winchester, often on Ballards which were much used at the time in smallbore NRA matches.
  
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marlinguy
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Ballards may be weaker,
but they sure are neater!

Re: Ballard .22 Rf
Reply #5 - Jul 29th, 2005 at 9:31pm
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The extractor type you described is the style used in all .22 RF Ballards, such as the #3's, so I'd guess that's what it is. The firing pin was probably changed, as all #3 Ballards, and almost all #2 Ballards used the rectangular firing pins. The difference between #2 and #3 firing pins is the #3's weren't reversible, being rimfire only.
The serial numbers can't be seen on the trigger group/block, unless you drop it out of the frame. I'd guess if it has the round firing pin, and the set triggers, maybe they just changed the entire breechblock to get the set triggers.
Sounds like a great old Ballard regardless, and these minor changes are very common in single shots of this era, (Ballards especially).
  
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