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Can Anyone I.D. This .22 LR Firing Block?

Comments

4 comments

  • Anti Kue

    I think Smith & Wesson may have had something like this. Looked like a revolver but with a flat block for a cylinder.

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  • williwm

    The Colt Camp Perry used a similar block but it’s definitely not the Colts. S&W made several ss handguns but None used a swingout block to my knowledge. Looking at the machining of the bottom locking notch and lack of an extractor leads me to think it may have been someones project to convert a revolver to a ss.

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  • waltermoe

    At first glance it reminds me of a Smith& Wesson model 1891 target pistol. However that can’t be account of the model 1891 had a barrel and flat chamber as one piece. It is hard to tell from the pictures but it appears that the solid bottom under the chamber is shorter. If there are no proof marks on this flat chamber I would guess that it is someone’s attempt at making a revolver into a single shot pistol for some reason. Possible someone had a revolver that didn’t have a cylinder and decided to make a single shot block in order to make the gun serviceable as a single shot pistol.

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  • buttplate

    Thank you all for your inputs. It is more than likely what you've said about someone making a single shot revolver cylinder. I have found some pictures that show a Rollin-White patent that resembles this cylinder/firing block somewhat.

    Thank you all again!

    Stay safe!

    Buttplate

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