There is machine work involved.Good Evening
I'm looking to upgrade fire control on my old style Bat M with the 0.250" dia firing pin.
I`ve been reading up on the tungsten carbide weights and modified spring that can be added , does anyone know if you can buy this as a kit to install?
Thanks in advance
Mike



send it to a smith that really understands ignition.Good Evening
I'm looking to upgrade fire control on my old style Bat M with the 0.250" dia firing pin.
I`ve been reading up on the tungsten carbide weights and modified spring that can be added , does anyone know if you can buy this as a kit to install?
Thanks in advance
Mike
But please keep in mind, this is not my idea. I am simply following what others have done.Thanks for the reply's & showing the photos.
I'm tempted to get updated .280" firing pin assembly like @Alex Wheeler suggested which will leave me with the old type assembly to experiment with later down the line.
With the new type assembly is there any down side to going for the roller cocking piece?
Some nice machining there @jackieschmidt , I like the idea of the weight exiting the rear of the shroud , has this been done so you can experiment with different weights which are easier to swap out as opposed to the weights which are sandwiched between the boss at striking end and spring which would be more effort to change?


With the new type assembly is there any down side to going for the roller cocking piece?
Since when did a gun shot off some sort of rest ever care about lock time? Maybe, just maybe shooting offhand it might help but in other scenarios not. Heavier pins have been shown in some cases to improve accuracy where attempting to decrease lock time with lighter pins and or heavier springs have shown the opposite.If a heavier firing pin gives you slower lock time, how can it be a upgrade?
Since when did a gun shot off some sort of rest ever care about lock time? Maybe, just maybe shooting offhand it might help but in other scenarios not. Heavier pins have been shown in some cases to improve accuracy where attempting to decrease lock time with lighter pins and or heavier springs
I’m genuinely curious. How do you know you need to upgrade the firing pin on your bat vs a different spring?Good Evening
I'm looking to upgrade fire control on my old style Bat M with the 0.250" dia firing pin.
I`ve been reading up on the tungsten carbide weights and modified spring that can be added , does anyone know if you can buy this as a kit to install?
Thanks in advance
Mike
Two ways I know of. If known good shooters or gunsmiths have tested and shared that a particular action shot better with a modification then it might warrant you trying it for yourself. The other is test for yourself and see if you can improve it.I’m genuinely curious. How do you know you need to upgrade the firing pin on your bat vs a different spring?
Reduce firing pin bounce? Longer intertia time at the firing end ?Since when did a gun shot off some sort of rest ever care about lock time? Maybe, just maybe shooting offhand it might help but in other scenarios not. Heavier pins have been shown in some cases to improve accuracy where attempting to decrease lock time with lighter pins and or heavier springs have shown the opposite.
 

