However after about 15 winds of the handle it feel like a spring is slipping. I disassembled the spring barrel and it was loaded with hard clumpy grease. Sound like the slippage problem?






Jerry B. you were correct. Now to cut and re-drill. Think I should redo the other one while I have it apart?Jerry B. wrote:If you wind and do not reach the end of the spring you have a broken spring somewhere in the middle of the spring. If you can give it a full wind and it thumps you have hard grease. Regardless, it was a good buy for $85 and the original receipt is a special bonus.
Congratulations, Jerry B.


Heat and let cool on its own. Rapid cooling will harden it.Jerry B. wrote:Stetam, If you shorten the spring a bit should you heat the new end red hot and dunk into water to change the temper of the metal? I remember watching Ira Dueltgen, my mentor collector, do this years ago. I spent many hours of pure enjoyment around his work bench.
Thanks, Jerry Blais
Stetam,stetam wrote:Heat and let cool on its own. Rapid cooling will harden it.Jerry B. wrote:Stetam, If you shorten the spring a bit should you heat the new end red hot and dunk into water to change the temper of the metal? I remember watching Ira Dueltgen, my mentor collector, do this years ago. I spent many hours of pure enjoyment around his work bench.
Thanks, Jerry Blais