I have no idea but interested in hearing the answers. If you don’t get any information you might go on YouTube and look up the Cinnabar ranch he took up gunsmithing and has a lot of old lever guns. Seems like a super down to earth guy, send him a email. He’s in WyomingIs anyone loading for a rifle made at the very end of the 1800's and recently converted to .38 Special~? If you are, are you shooting lead or jacketed bullets~? What powder, bullet and load are you shooting~?
I'd have to ask, "What kind of rifle.?"Is anyone loading for a rifle made at the very end of the 1800's and recently converted to .38 Special~? If you are, are you shooting lead or jacketed bullets~? What powder, bullet and load are you shooting~?
I'd be inclined to shoot a standard lead 158 grain LRN or LSWC 38 Special load, using Bullseye, W 231, Unique, etc.1885 Winchester Lo-Wall
i watched that guys whole video. its amazing the 1895s he has got. thanks for pointing it out.I have no idea but interested in hearing the answers. If you don’t get any information you might go on YouTube and look up the Cinnabar ranch he took up gunsmithing and has a lot of old lever guns. Seems like a super down to earth guy, send him a email. He’s in Wyoming
Wayne
This absolutely can happen!…may be off topic but years ago I bought several thousand rounds of Remington 38 special 158 jhp ammo from a local sporting goods store going out of business. We had shot some through a stub nose and other than they were whippy loads worked fine. One day we was headed up to build some fence and my wife ask me if she could take her new Smith 8 3/8” 38 I bought her along to do some plinking, I said sure. Later that day I stopped to work in a water trough so her and my youngest son started shooting…… I was about 40 yards away from them, after about her 3rd shot I heard something different I yelled don’t shoot again!!!I'd be inclined to shoot a standard lead 158 grain LRN I have heard of the jacket staying in the barrel and the lead core exiting.
It would help to know what rifle. But even the 1873 Winchester design can handle most 38 SPL loads with no danger of action failure.Is anyone loading for a rifle made at the very end of the 1800's and recently converted to .38 Special~? If you are, are you shooting lead or jacketed bullets~? What powder, bullet and load are you shooting~?
Yes it sure is!… I think things got tight for him on his ranch that’s multiple generations old and I can totally understand that as I’m on a 4th headed for fifth generation ranch myself, anyways maybe a year or so ago he moved to Cody to work in a big gunsmith shop, he still owns the Cinnabar, my sister and I are planning a trip this spring to look at property in Wyoming hoping to move out of the communist state of Washington and I fully plan on contacting him I believe he’s a down to earth good old boy.If that rig was recently redone, aren't there proper cartridge markings on the new barrel?
Those re-barrel jobs will vary depending on who does them, but I am hoping you trust the source you bought it from for the story. If not, then it would be worth the time to inspect the barrel and receiver before testing.
@bozo699 , that Cinibar Ranch collection is museum worthy all by itself! The two of them clearly have a passion for their collections. That Winchester collector's organization may also be a good bunch of folks for the OP to ask.
You might be correct on that and that would make sense. I also live in a communist state and plan on moving to Wyoming as soon as I retire, I’ll miss my ranch but I’ll just buy a smaller version there.If I remember correctly the reason they moved is, Oregon passed a gun law that made a bunch of the pump and lever guns illegal. They moved to Wyoming to avoid losing their collection.