Fitting a stainless cartridge lifter to a Winchester trapper
Posted: Sun Oct 01, 2017 2:18 pm
The Winchester 94 AE under lever is known for breaking cartridge lifters. New ones are all most impossible to source. So I was really excited to hear David at the shooting shed was going to make a replacement in stainless steel that promises to be all most unbreakable.
so I winged of a pm and insisted that they sell me one and they did. I received it about a week ago.
First impressions on examination of the lifter were favorable it looked just like the original. I had a measure and all the dimensions tallied with the original. Because of my engineering back ground I'm quite anal about things been square etc. So i did notice that the cut out on the right side is slightly radius-ed as opposed to square but that may be to make it function slicker. A layman probably would not notice and it certainly wont affect the functioning of the lifter. The other thing I noticed the ramp at the rear of the lifter were the head of the cartridge rests as a ramp on it that is a bit longer and probably thicker than the original This is the point were the original lifters normally snap. So I'm guessing David beefed this up intentionally.
All in all I am well impressed with the lifter.
I set aside to day Sunday to fit it. So after a cracking beef dinner and several cups of tea I set to.
I don't know if any one has ever taken a Winchester trapper 94 AE to bits. It is not a massively complicated task but you do need the right tools and its a bit fiddly. It took me about 30 minutes to dismantle it and fit the new lifter after comparing it with the original.
Once I had it back together I racked the action to make sure it functioned and it did.I then racked the rifle as hard as I could and kept on raking it with out any issues at all.
I'm well impressed. I am going to make up some dummy rounds and function check it again. But to be honest I don't foresee any problems.
If I was you and you have a Winchester I advise you to invest in one before they all get snapped up.
Now Im going to try this new picture up load thingy.
so I winged of a pm and insisted that they sell me one and they did. I received it about a week ago.
First impressions on examination of the lifter were favorable it looked just like the original. I had a measure and all the dimensions tallied with the original. Because of my engineering back ground I'm quite anal about things been square etc. So i did notice that the cut out on the right side is slightly radius-ed as opposed to square but that may be to make it function slicker. A layman probably would not notice and it certainly wont affect the functioning of the lifter. The other thing I noticed the ramp at the rear of the lifter were the head of the cartridge rests as a ramp on it that is a bit longer and probably thicker than the original This is the point were the original lifters normally snap. So I'm guessing David beefed this up intentionally.
All in all I am well impressed with the lifter.
I set aside to day Sunday to fit it. So after a cracking beef dinner and several cups of tea I set to.
I don't know if any one has ever taken a Winchester trapper 94 AE to bits. It is not a massively complicated task but you do need the right tools and its a bit fiddly. It took me about 30 minutes to dismantle it and fit the new lifter after comparing it with the original.
Once I had it back together I racked the action to make sure it functioned and it did.I then racked the rifle as hard as I could and kept on raking it with out any issues at all.
I'm well impressed. I am going to make up some dummy rounds and function check it again. But to be honest I don't foresee any problems.
If I was you and you have a Winchester I advise you to invest in one before they all get snapped up.
Now Im going to try this new picture up load thingy.