Help!!!
Im tangeled up in a discussion on the ASSRA site about a guy who says he saw the barrel blown out od a TD action without any damage to the action. I find it hard to believe this prehistoric receiver is tougher than the barrel threads if fit up tight.TD guys are defending the strength of the old actions. I also find it hard to believe the older steels are stronger than the modern stuff. While searching for information I found this,I think it could be aplicable to this forum.
http://www.collectorsfirearms.com/admin/product_details.php?itemID=37575Help me understand this issue im having with the barrel blown out od the trap door.
Thanks
Tom
Have heard this one before and have my own opinion, and you've touched on both areas of concern with me.
First consider the source. Some of the ASSRA guys are genuine experts and nice fellows while others are not. How much COMPLETE and CORRECT info are you getting?
Secondly, the matter of good fitup. IMO a loose shallow thread fit in the barrel allowed it to be blown forward out of the receiver past the shallow thread engagement shoulders. This is sometimes a problem with people inexperienced in cutting square threads (most smiths, it appears).
To use this isolated example as being typical of the strenth of the trapdoor action is, IMO, a mistake. This failure mode (blowing the barrel out of the otherwise-unharmed action) is almost unheard-of below the 100K psi pressure level unless something was wrong with the fitup. AAMOF the only example I can recall is one of Ackley's Japanese actions, all other blowouts (known to me) damaged the action to some degree.
For this reason I believe there was something atypical about this example and, to me, the thread fitup is a prime suspect.
MP's tests, OTOH, are IMO much more believable, with no surprises and a measured progression to a logically valid conclusion. Certainly not definitively conclusively final, from lack of examples if nothing else, but still very believable.
Regards, Joe