That was exactly what I was looking for. Thank you for the information and knowledge.
Well done Larry !
Mr Potterfield, you have one of the COOLEST jobs on the planet. What an education it would be to serve as your apprentice!
LP is the man
great polish job you did
Um grande profissional 🇧🇷
Nice work, Larry. I would pass on this one, myself! 🤔
I have a 1920's Remington Model 11 Shotgun that has a single rib but I want to remove it. I assume all I will need to do is warm it up to remove it?
Oof! Bet that top rib looks like a roller coaster when it’s back on!
Mr. Potterfield , what is used to hold the barrel shim and the piece that holds the forearm clip in place? Is 50%/50% solder strong enough to hold them as well????
I had assumed that brass or even silver was used to hold that rib in place.
Now that I've seen this , now I have the confidence to put fluted ribs on barrels that I've made without fear of over heating them , because I always thought they were brazed on.
Can the barrels be taken apart and separated?
Then put back together?
I have a side by side with both barrels bent midway through.
Larry being a great scource of information can you help with this pproblem:- the new gun laws here in New Zealand have made a number of older 22 rifles a prohibited item due to having magizines which hold more than 10 rounds. I have Marlin mod 37 which requires the mag to be reduced to 10 rounds down from the original 15 but with out changing the appearance being an heirloom item. Any assistance would be greatly appreciated. Regards John.
Buen día.siempre tuve una duda con que material se suelda con plata?
What type of solder use for solding in berrel rib
how do you find a v shaped front sight for a side by side shotgun anyway it seems to be rare?
Does the heating of the barrels not effect tempering and lead potenitally to a weaker barrel?
1:13
Was that the shim he put on the fore end latch in a previous video that fell off?
Is the rib on a mossberg 500 removed the same way?
Hello friend, what steel are these 4140 steel pipes made from?
Its actually very difficult to do....tried that on a damascus barrel and damaged it trying to get the solder off....ended up with a coachgun 😁
Wonderful, mine rings. :)
What material used to weld the pipes friend?
Now if you reblue the barrels you'll melt the solder and loose the rib due to the temp of the bluing. So you're stuck with parkerizing, painting, or polishing. But you'll never be able to reblue any barrel your flow low temp solder on.
@@George-qn5zy talking about caustic salts here. Of course slow rust is fine, but not the same finish of someone wants a high polish like most doubles.
I had been wand6what was used to hold that rib in place for years. Wouldn't have figured that a simple 50%/50% solder would have held it in place on steel. Now I wander what is used to hold the barrel shim and the piece that holds the forearm clip in place? I would assume a brazing rod or silver solder????? Mr. Potterfield would you chime in on this please????????
Guess who taught chuck Norris! Yeahp you guest it, Larry potter field.
yeah larry u better show me how its done awww yeah
Larry could do Bill Clinton for Halloween ;o)
I hope he'll do some AR15 related vids ...
Good ol' Wood and steel, black guns go somewhere else Thank You. ~(:-})={>----]
propane propane
something broke off when you opened the gun 1:10 😊
Likely a shim on the barrel hook, to keep the barrels on-face until a more permanent fix is made.
It's the shim he loctited on in the previous video. That was meant to be the permanent repair
Honestly, I wish I could be as happy as Larry while at work. Gotta do what you love and love what you do. Thanks for keeping the art of gunsmithing alive, sir!
Are you sure he is happy or just smiling for the sake of the video?
@@bakanibaleni5865 Maybe both 🤔🤷