I was reading an article or post somewhere on the net a few days ago about end shake/play and barrel/cylinder gap and it's been on my mind ever since. Since rifles are my main area of knowledge, I thought I'd see what more experienced revolver shooters thought. So...
If I remember everything correctly, the article/post said that with the gun in full lock-up, the barrel/cylinder gap should be .006" at the most, with .002-.004" being preferred. It also said that preferably there would be zero end shake/play, with .001" being maximum.
Now, my thoughts while reading this was that those tolerances sound more like a custom job than a production revolver. The best I can remember though (should've bookmarked it :roll: ), it was talking about production guns too. I guess in a perfect world those tolerances would be nice, but I check over every revolver I buy and then check them periodically to see if they're loosening up. Although the article/post considered .006" barrel/cylinder gap maximum, I don't think I ever recall owning a production revolover with less than that, and most have been .006-.008". As for end shake/play, I've seen and had several that had zero play when new, but after a few hundred rounds, I've never had one remain perfectly tight, and most eventually loosen to .002-.004" of end shake/play. I guess if the article/post's tolerances are correct, then some of my guns need a little work, cause I can't stand knowing something isn't within spec, even if it does shoot okay
Any thoughts...