Spring has sprung. Get out and shoot your Henry
My HO15-308 is home
Re: My HO15-308 is home
That's a nice one. Congrats on a great pick up. I'll bet the fiddleback is even more clear in person.
2 x
Re: My HO15-308 is home
Thank you and it does show up better in person.Yornoc3 wrote:That's a nice one. Congrats on a great pick up. I'll bet the fiddleback is even more clear in person.
Mac
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- RanchRoper
- Forum Ambassador
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Re: My HO15-308 is home
She is a beauty!
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1860 Colt SA Richards Conversion Revolver .45C
1860 Henry .45C
1885 High Wall .45C
1820-1840 Frontier Percussion .50
1790-1820 Frontier Flintlock .50
Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully
1860 Henry .45C
1885 High Wall .45C
1820-1840 Frontier Percussion .50
1790-1820 Frontier Flintlock .50
Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully
Re: My HO15-308 is home
Well this is a real bummer...
I have to send my 308 back to Henry.
I have some issues with the trigger and the excessive hammer pull.
The good folks at Henry have assured me that they will make things right and I am hopeful that they will...
I'll keep you posted
Mac
I have to send my 308 back to Henry.
I have some issues with the trigger and the excessive hammer pull.
The good folks at Henry have assured me that they will make things right and I am hopeful that they will...
I'll keep you posted
Mac
1 x
Re: My HO15-308 is home
I'v also noticed the stout hammer pull, but have attributed that to the rebounding hammer mechanism. Is your trigger pull really heavy? I was surprised how good the trigger is on my 45-70; the .243 feels OK, but, lacking a snap cap, I haven't really checked it out yet. I've heard of a few others being heavy, so I'm confident Henry will get it right for you.
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Re: My HO15-308 is home
It's pretty bad actually.. There is a definite hitch pulling it back. It's almost 10lbs and I basically have a set trigger with it the way it is right now. I can start squeezing it and stop, then have a lighter pull of 3.5 lbs to finish the break and all of this is easy to hear as well feel with it. It actually feels like I am dragging the trigger over gravel... The hammer pull is reading 18.5lbs... So I know something is definitely wrong with it. I've tried lubricating it and working the trigger on it several hundred times but that's gotten me nowhere.Yornoc3 wrote:I'v also noticed the stout hammer pull, but have attributed that to the rebounding hammer mechanism. Is your trigger pull really heavy? I was surprised how good the trigger is on my 45-70; the .243 feels OK, but, lacking a snap cap, I haven't really checked it out yet. I've heard of a few others being heavy, so I'm confident Henry will get it right for you.
I could take it apart and do a trigger job myself, but seeing as this gun is new and unfired I shouldn't mess with it..
I'll give them a chance to fix it first...
This is all very frustrating to say the least
Mac
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- JEBar
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Re: My HO15-308 is home
frustration understood but I do agree with your decision to send it back .... not only will they get it right for you but, with this being a new line, they may learn something that will help them
1 x
Re: My HO15-308 is home
I do hope so, after all this would be a great rifle to hand down to one of my sons.JEBar wrote:frustration understood but I do agree with your decision to send it back .... not only will they get it right for you but, with this being a new line, they may learn something that will help them
Mac
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Re: My HO15-308 is home
Mac11700 wrote:It's pretty bad actually.. . It actually feels like I am dragging the trigger over gravel... The hammer pull is reading 18.5lbs... So I know something is definitely wrong with it.....Yornoc3 wrote:I'v also noticed the stout hammer pull....
Unfortunately, nothing is wrong with it. Henry designed and built it that way, and it appears engineered by their lawyers. The hammer is stiff because it compresses two springs. If you remove the inner spring it will lighten the pull, but then the hammer strike may not ignite all primers because the strike energy is neutered by the rebound action. The reason is the shape of the hammer spring guide hand. Re-contouring the spring guide is the fix, but doing it should be done by an EXPERIENCED GUNSMITH who can visualize the motion and not overdo the reduction. I suspect Henry will not sell you a spring guide for your experimentation. A gunsmith doing the mod could fabricate a duplicate spring guide so you could preserve the OEM item. Expect to invest a wad of $$$ for the job.
The gritty trigger is caused by the conical-shaped trigger return spring. Its wide end slides against an area of the frame casting which has a crude sand-cast finish resembling aggregate concrete. Filing the offending area smooth is the fix.
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- CT_Shooter
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- Location: Connecticut
Re: My HO15-308 is home
Thanks, slofyr. But, please explain your statement a bit more clearly. Did you talk to anyone at Henry that helped form this conclusion? What was that conversation like? Did they admit to a known problem with the shape of the hammer spring guide? How and why were lawyers likely involved? I'd like to know more.slofyr wrote:
Unfortunately, nothing is wrong with it. Henry designed and built it that way, and it appears engineered by their lawyers. The hammer is stiff because it compresses two springs. If you remove the inner spring it will lighten the pull, but then the hammer strike may not ignite all primers because the strike energy is neutered by the rebound action. The reason is the shape of the hammer spring guide hand. Re-contouring the spring guide is the fix, but doing it should be done by an EXPERIENCED GUNSMITH who can visualize the motion and not overdo the reduction. I suspect Henry will not sell you a spring guide for your experimentation. A gunsmith doing the mod could fabricate a duplicate spring guide so you could preserve the OEM item. Expect to invest a wad of $$$ for the job.
The gritty trigger is caused by the conical-shaped trigger return spring. Its wide end slides against an area of the frame casting which has a crude sand-cast finish resembling aggregate concrete. Filing the offending area smooth is the fix.
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H006M Big Boy Brass .357 - H001 Classic .22LR - Uberti / Taylors & Co. SmokeWagon .357 5.5" - Uberti / Taylors & Co. RanchHand .22LR 5.5"