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Thread: Forks on Webley breakbarrels

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  1. #1
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    Forks on Webley breakbarrels

    Has anyone ever had the forks off 70's-80's-90's Webley breakbarrels?
    With the recent successtory on resealing the problematic Mercury tube by screwing out the forks and re-gluing them, I'm wondering if anyone knows how Webley mounted the forks on their actions?
    Some of my Vulcan actions dont give as much power as the others, and its seems like theres a thin line/gap visible on the outside where the forks meet the tube, so they don seem welded or brazed?
    Too many airguns!

  2. #2
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    Forks on Webley breakbarrels

    Quote Originally Posted by evert View Post
    Has anyone ever had the forks off 70's-80's-90's Webley breakbarrels?
    With the recent successtory on resealing the problematic Mercury tube by screwing out the forks and re-gluing them, I'm wondering if anyone knows how Webley mounted the forks on their actions?
    Some of my Vulcan actions dont give as much power as the others, and its seems like theres a thin line/gap visible on the outside where the forks meet the tube, so they don seem welded or brazed?
    I've no idea if they're welded or brazed evert but have you tried a light sprinkle of talc around the join while firing to see if any air is escaping?

  3. #3
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    The cylinder ends are threaded and have thread lock compound, so heat and some force are needed to remove them.

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    Quote Originally Posted by BTDT View Post
    The cylinder ends are threaded and have thread lock compound, so heat and some force are needed to remove them.
    Great, thats what I've been suspecting!
    Too many airguns!

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by BTDT View Post
    The cylinder ends are threaded and have thread lock compound, so heat and some force are needed to remove them.
    By the way, do you know if its a left- or right hand thread?
    Too many airguns!

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by evert View Post
    By the way, do you know if its a left- or right hand thread?
    I can't say for certain, as it was 40 years ago that I did the repair, but had it been a left hand thread, I think would have remembered that.

    So probably right hand.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by BTDT View Post
    I can't say for certain, as it was 40 years ago that I did the repair, but had it been a left hand thread, I think would have remembered that.

    So probably right hand.
    Thanks! A member on here confirmed that his Hawk had right hand threads, and I found the same in my BSA Mercury and Milbro Diana series 70.

    Two of my Vulcan tubes have been struggling to reach 10fpe...
    I've tried several piston seals(Maccari uretane, OEM PTFE, OEM purple urethane and Australian custom seals) and different springs (Webley, Maccari, Hatsan 10 joule spaced up) and they dont respond well.

    One of the tubes is quite rough cosmetically, so I don have much to loose. Sounds like a blowtorch job coming up!
    Too many airguns!

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by junglie View Post
    I've no idea if they're welded or brazed evert but have you tried a light sprinkle of talc around the join while firing to see if any air is escaping?
    That may be a good idea!
    I've seen some oil seep out of the thin hairline gap between the cylinder and forks, which is what got me thinking
    Too many airguns!

  9. #9
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    Wow! Very interesting.

    I suppose it's one of the things that I often wondered about a long time ago but then it just got relegated to the back of my mind. And not just on these rifles, but all break barrels. The main thing we seemed to worry about was sloppy breech jaws on rifles sporting a pivot pin as opposed to a more secure bolt. But then you join the BBS and, firstly, the breech void on HW35s came to the fore. And many 35s, fettled by enlightened tinkerers will now deliver the performance promised. And now the Mercury and these Wobblies are under the spotlight. I wonder how many rifles from many manufacturers are actually affected to one degree or another? And not just break barrels either. Even the mighty TX has sometimes been under the spotlight for a leaky comp tube end. Are we now entering a new era of leaky breech scrutiny?
    Last edited by TonyL; 11-03-2022 at 07:06 AM.
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  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by TonyL View Post
    I wonder how many rifles from many manufacturers are actually affected to one degree or another? And not just break barrels either. Even the mighty TX has sometimes been under the spotlight for a leaky comp tube end. Are we now entering a new era of leaky breech scrutiny?
    Perhaps more will pop up as the glue used back in the day probably deteriorates?

    For me it started with the Milbro Diana series 70:
    https://www.airgunbbs.com/showthread...ack-of-quality
    Too many airguns!

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