oneatatime wrote on Oct 23
rd, 2020 at 5:06pm:
Vall, I did a comparison between the thickness of the hammer and that of the sidewall on (the photo of) this rifle vs my Ballard. This one was 74% and mine was 85%. Has it been thinned enough to remove the rebate? Also, in the top view notice the shape of the flat crescent on the sidewall next to the hammer/block and compare it to one on a rebated sidewall.
Chauncey, I think it's very possible to round the top of a rebated step side, and it would remove the step quite easily.
I've spent this afternoon examining Joe's pictures, and a good number of my Ballard rifles with and without stepped receivers. They all had the little semi triangular flat on each side where the sloped sidewalls meet the receiver, whether stepped or flat side. With one exception! That heavy sided AW Peterson modified custom gun is a .22LR, built on a "heavy" flat side receiver. That's the thicker receiver that measures 1.285" wide, and it doesn't have those flats at all! The receiver sides just come right up to the vertical receiver ring back edge, without the two triangle shaped flats.
I didn't dig my 3 barrel pope out of it's case, and I should. It's a 500 range serial number flat side, and it might compare to the heavy side AW Peterson gun. It's got some oddities of it's own with the early receiver, and the set trigger system hangs well below the bottom of the receiver like the first year set trigger plates did. Those set trigger plates also ran the full length of the breech block, and not short like all later set trigger plates were.
I found this old picture just now, which shows my 3 barrel Pope receiver does have very easily seen flats at the junction. Even with a little blurry image.
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