16 October 2022, 20:50
richjTrapdoor H&R
My cousin got this one from her fathers estate. H&R Trapdoor.
16 October 2022, 23:17
dpcdI remember those from the 70s; they were well made nice rifles.
The 1970s I mean.
17 October 2022, 08:33
2152hqNice rifles.
They did have some problems with some of those poping open when fired. the empty case usualy being ejected.
The problem was that the cam latch shaft is round and the thumb piece is fitted to it and held with a simple set screw.
If the set screw loosens, the thumb latch position may give a false indication that the locking cam at the other end has the breech block locked all the way shut when it isn't.
The usual fix was to pin the thumb latch to the locking cam spindle.
Not everyone of these had the issue. Just some surprised their owners/shooters with self ejection.
17 October 2022, 09:47
rcraigI had one of the auto ejectors. It soon became someone else's problem.
17 October 2022, 17:53
Bill/OregonMy first Trapdoor was an H&R carbine. Running that big Lyman 457125 "gummint boolit" over a case full of compressed black sure let your skinny college kid's clavicle know that you had fired a serious rifle with poor form.
17 October 2022, 23:09
congomikeI like mine, the only issue is that when the rear sight is all the way lowered, you cannot see it due to hinge block being too high. The originals are grooved on top the hinge block, but the H&R is not.
19 October 2022, 02:58
fjrdocAutomatic shell ejection. Sounds like a semi-automatic single shot.

20 October 2022, 02:55
Bill LeeperI have one of the H&R Officer's Model
Replica. One of the most nicely balanced and pleasant to carry, rifles I own. GD