03 March 2009, 09:52
Tony Rpietta .44 cylinders
I just bought a new pietta .44 a couple days ago and was wondering where can you get extra cylinders for a decent price. I went to midway and they are around 200 dollars for an extra cylinder. I would like to have a couple that I can load before I go out shooting.
13 July 2009, 04:46
nordrsetaMight be convenient but don't cap the nipples until the cylinder is fixed in the frame.
23 July 2009, 21:22
NaphtaliIf you referred to M1858 Remington cylinders, be advised --
Pietta manufactures two completely different M1858s. Their budget-priced version has virtually no parts that interchange with their competition class. I specifically include barrels (inside diameters, bore diameters, twist), cylinders (different chamber diameters), lock work.
The top-of-the-line M1858s are among the most precisely assembled revolvers I've experienced. And I own several Freedom Arms revolvers and Pythons.
So be certain which revolver you own before ordering. Tip: The better one is
expensive.
20 February 2010, 01:59
0X0quote:
Originally posted by Naphtali:
If you referred to M1858 Remington cylinders, be advised --
Pietta manufactures two completely different M1858s.
So be certain which revolver you own before ordering. Tip: The better one is expensive.
I have the Pietta, 1858 Rem. Stainless. Very fine fit/finish inside and out. Came with the original box, and a spare cylinder.
How do I tell what I have?
20 February 2010, 11:17
Naphtaliquote:
Originally posted by 0X0:
quote:
Originally posted by Naphtali:
If you referred to M1858 Remington cylinders, be advised --
Pietta manufactures two completely different M1858s.
So be certain which revolver you own before ordering. Tip: The better one is expensive.
I have the Pietta, 1858 Rem. Stainless. Very fine fit/finish inside and out. Came with the original box, and a spare cylinder.
How do I tell what I have?
There are several quick-and-dirty ways.
1. Price - The special competition 1858s are about three times the cost of their standard model. I base this on what I paid in 1999.
2. Barrel has progressive rifling. Standard model has uniform rifling.
3. Bore diameter is .456 inch. Standard model is smaller, either .452 or .454 inch. I own no standard 1858, so I cannot confirm either bore size. And chambers are also larger to accommodate a larger diameter projectile.
These are differences anyone can identify in a few minutes with an inside micrometer, or a bore lamp, or a sales receipt.
There are major differences in lock work, but to observe these you need to partly disassemble one of each. And, as I wrote previously, fit and finish are among the finest I've experienced. I own Freedom Arms 83s and 97s. I owned a carbon steel Python and a stainless one several years ago. I have a friend who owns an S&W New Century First Model (aka "triple lock"), and, lastly, I owned an S&W 44 Magnum revolver, the model before they were named Model 29. Pietta's competition 1858 Remington is in the same general quality of assembly category. I own three of these with four extra cylinders each. All cylinders interchange among all my 1858s without fitting, without issue. I cannot confirm quality of materials, metallurgy, and heat treat are comparable, though. In the case of Freedom Arms, that comparable quality would be difficult to achieve.
Hope this helps.
Well . . . Not really.
Stainless, 1858 Rem. Pietta. I've had it entirely disassembled and the internal parts are all finely finished, polished.
Never looked at the rifling nor put a micrometer on the bore. I bought a blued model, and then traded the same shop for the stainless -- and $50. I got a second cylinder, horsehide cylinder pouch.
Everything is very smooth, finely finished. I expected something obvious like marking or features like an adj. sight.
Price is no help. The shop thought it was nickel plated. They don't know their BP stuff.