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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Did any of the above companies forge their own actions? Was there a such a thing as, a Purdey's blast furnace.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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I doubt that the actual amount of steel they used would warrant such an operation.
In their hayday Purdey was finishing 300-400 a year, average 5 lbs of steel on a finished gun . Suppose they left 2/3 of the amount of the forgings on the shop floor, that would be about 6000 lbs a year, hardly worth a blast furnace and hammers.
My problem lies in reconciling my gross habits with my net income. - Errol Flynn
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Lowell, I don't know the history of these companies, probably DT can tell us something of it, but I can tell you that "hand forgings" were invented just for this type of low production manufacturing.
A "hand forging" is one that is done without a pre-contoured die to shape the part. The idea of getting the benefit of idealized grain flow is still a goal as with die forging.
"hand forgings" are still done today for short run jobs. Nearly all are done on powered hammer machines while the operator manipulates the red hot material with tongs and either operates the hammer with a foot pedal or another person operates the hammer machine. However, as the name implies, it was and probably still is done in some places, with a real hammer. I'm guessing if Purdey or the other biggies did their own forgings, they made hand forgings.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Probably preferred to keep the smokestack end of it at a distance--such as the distance to Birminghm. Every knife and blade maker has a power hammer these days; most hobbyists are probably better equipped than Purdey.
jack
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Chuck,Correct about the Purdey"Hand Forgings" I have quite a selection of forgings from 'Back Then". Top Levers,Trigger Guards,Pairs of 'Luggers", Forend 'Tip" forgings,Trigger-Plate,I did have a Pair of Sidelock, Sideplates, Peter Nelson would be the Person to give all the 'Real Gen' Or The Write Hon. Jack Rowe.Gunmaker Extrordinaire. He is 'Still' a Leadville Matchless Mine of Gunmaking Information...I am, at this time Filing-up a Top-Lever for a 'London' 20b dbbl that I am building.Theres a pile of 'filings' back of the vise,'Like you Read about'!! Talk about Old World Craftsmanship!!!'Nuts',This is a Young Mans Job!Pushing a'Bastard across' a Hand-Forging is a 'Six greenie pack' job...CC/dt
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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A good many of the forgings were made at a company called Hughes & Johnson in Oldbury West Midlands, a horse and cart journey from the Birmingham gun quarter.My Grandad and Uncle used to work there, Grandad was the foreman forger (hands on working).They used to do a lot for Skimmin who supplied the trade.I remember as a young boy having a soapbox cart with forged axles and Akerman steering.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Not having a background in metalworking, I had to ask. Bring in the raw stock, or the big boys doin' it all for themselves.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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this brings up a question I have always had. I have seen pictures of a couple of guysin the DGJ holding a very nice side lock double and the caption would say that they had made the entire gun, beginning with forging the action themselves. As a gunmaker and bladesmith, I always wondered what type of steel did they start out with and how did they go about forging out the action?
skunk out
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Far as I can determine, no gunmaker grew his own trees for stocks, mined his own iron ore for steel, or smelted steel for himself. While it is entirely possible to do small part forging by hand, per Chuck, I doubt that it was done other than for Master training. It makes no economic sense to do in-house forging when out-house specialists are available who can do it probably better and certainly cheaper. The raw action forging doesn't have a big impact on final quality unless it is actually defective and the Brit skill in forging had long passed the point where trade made defective action forgings were likely.
Keep in mind that there was a trade willing and able to supply parts at any state of finish - raw forgings to finished guns. Locks and semi-finished barrels were often bought in, too. For any given shop at any given time, it depended on who was employed in-house and what the order books looked like. Per the success of William Evans, it was far more important that the shop owner enforce high standards for quality and service rather than make guns.
Further, note that the steel used in most gun parts was plain low carbon; springs, for example, excepted. It was easy to work and sufficiently strong for the pressures encountered. When case hardened, it was also quite wear resistant and relatively resistant to corrosion. There were basically no propriatary alloys - steel was steel. The skill lay in close fit of parts all the way through the mechanism and in finish. BTW, IMO, the skill of styling is no small part of high quality work.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Elton John (rocket man)-
The guys i read about were individual gunmakers who went out on their own. When reading about them I was quite sure I knew their reasoning for doing it all from scratch themselves. It is the same reason I do what I do when building a gun-to show off and prove what you can do. Like when I am working on these rifles to get in the Guild next year-even the Guild acknowledges that during the normal course of busienss you would typically buy items and fit them, but for your "show rifles" you need to show what you can do and make it from scratch.
I was very sure this is why those guys did it, but I was wondering what they started with and what they were trying to accomplish with the forging-the final rough shape if you will. I have spent a fair amount of time standing in "the dragon's breath" and have myself forged things that would have been easier for me to electrically weld.
skunk out
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