I have .32, .36, ,35, .50, .54, .56SB & .58 barrels for my Renegade that I can switch out.
Yes, you can do that. Been talked about.
I do it all the time. I have two now but had three at one time.
I have a switch barrel hot rod Hawken now ,
.45-.50-.54-and .62/20guage smoothie...
I have .32, .36, ,35, .50, .54, .56SB & .58 barrels for my Renegade that I can switch out.
I have .32, .36, ,35, .50, .54, .56SB & .58 barrels for my Renegade that I can switch out.
Nope.Are you talking about the 15/16" .54 drop-in that is shown on the website as backorder?
GMT-54-C-TC-32-B T/C Drop-in Barrel Assembly, .54 caliber, 1-66" twist, 15/16" octagon, 32" length, blued, 5.2 lb, percussion, for Thompson Center Hawken Rifle..
Price: $269.00
I used the .32 barrel for line shoots mostly and won several 1st place awards with it. I currently have the barrel for sale in this forums classifieds, as I don't shoot line shoots anymore, and never much liked shooting from the bench.I bet that 32 gives ya a workout. I had a 36 on a Renegade & about had to put wheels under the front to haul it around.
Ramrod retention spring came with all the drop GM barrels I have, but maybe not included any more. You could use the screw (6-48) and spring from your original TC barrel. TOW and other suppliers do carry replacement screw and spring.Replacement .50 drop-in barrel arrived today. Well made. The edges of the flats are sharper than the original, the sights are fiber optic rather than replica (more effective, but less authentic), and the barrel lacks provision for the ramrod retention spring of the original, so you have to keep the barrel pointed up to keep the ramrod from falling out.(I'll think of a substitute retention mechanism).
All in all, I am pleased with it.
Replacement .50 drop-in barrel arrived today. Well made. The edges of the flats are sharper than the original, the sights are fiber optic rather than replica (more effective, but less authentic), and the barrel lacks provision for the ramrod retention spring of the original, so you have to keep the barrel pointed up to keep the ramrod from falling out.(I'll think of a substitute retention mechanism).
All in all, I am pleased with it.
In the past, I have used a flat leather thong tied to one of the ram rod ferrules. It provides enough tension to hold the ram rod in place.
The TC screw and spring didn’t fit.... interesting. Things must have changed??? TOW sells the same TC screw and spring for both TC and GM barrels."You could use the screw (6-48) and spring from your original TC barrel".
No, you can't. The new under barrel rail is structured differently and will not accept the original spring and screw - it doesn't fit.
That spring is one I removed from a new GM barrel as installed at the factory. The difference as I remember as far as what you are calling the ‘screw recess’ in the rib, is that TC put a countersink in the threaded hole while GM put a counterbore in theirs. Both use a similar if not identical spring. Not sure what you mean by the spring being stable. Have four GM barrels purchased new by me and a few more purchased used, all with the same setup.Based on the distortion in the spring hole, I'd guess that spring has been mounted on a GM and then torqued down into the larger screw recess in the GM rail. Is that correct? How stable is the spring?
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