


Upon tearing the rifle down to clean out all the age-old crud, I discovered possibly why the bore was still so good. At some long ago time someone had installed a bushing in the bolt face for the firing pin. They did a very good job with the machine work, but the bushing was too long, the hole too small, and it would not allow the firing pin to protrude through the bolt face. Since the rifle could no longer fire, I believe it was relegated to a barn or shed, where over many years the outside acquired its crusty appearance and the bore remained unused. I'm not sure why they didn't just re-do the repair properly, maybe it was getting too expensive to be worth it?
Thanks to the skills of my machinist brother, the bushing was re-drilled and shortened, and the firing pin once again could do its job. I temporarily reinstalled the bolt and firing pin to test a primed empty case, and I got a satisfying POP!
The extractor broke in two when I removed the bolt, so I bought a new USA-made reproduction extractor off Ebay. It needed a lot of fitting as it was oversize in just about every dimension, but I got it functioning with some dummy rounds. I also discovered that the magazine spring was too short and did not push the last two cartridges back far enough to load properly, so i ordered and installed a new one.
The buttstock & forend were treated to several applications of boiled linseed oil, which darkened them and softened the hard dry wood to what I felt was at least a useable state. I replaced the sights and added a modern Marble's tang sight too. Its shiny blueing looks out of place, but hey, this is going to be a shooter.
I glued a thin spring-steel shim into the full-cock notch on the hammer, loosened the mainspring tension, and thus reduced the trigger pull to a more manageable four pounds. Finally, the rifle was reassembled and once more shootable.
I've never had a .44-40 before, but planned on it when opportunity presented, so over the past few years I have gathered up a set of used dies and bought a couple boxes of W-W brass. I have an RCBS 44-200-CM bullet mould that didn't work out for my Marlin Cowboy .44 Magnum rifle, but the bullets it casts look perfect for the .44-40. I was a little disappointed when I slugged the bore on the Winchester and found it to be .431" as I expected closer to .429". The RCBS bullets drop from the mould at .429"-.430" so are a bit small, but it's all I have for now and I went with it. The past weeks of rainy, cold weather were happily spent getting the rifle and test loads of ammunition ready, and I was delighted to see a mostly clear, cool, and sunny day when I awoke this morning. Today is the day!
The local public shooting area is on Bureau of Land Management land, and was already crowded with shooters when I arrived at 9:00 A.M. Still, I was able to get a spot and set up my portable shooting bench and a 50 meter target board. Darn, I forgot my camera for the big event! Oh well...
Not fully trusting the old Winchester to be sound, I lashed it down to my bench and tied a string off to the trigger so I could remote-fire the first shot. After cautioning the shooters on either side of me to stand back, I loaded a round, stood well back, and yanked the string. THE RIFLE EXPLODED INTO A MILLION PIECES!!
Naw, I just said that to create a little excitement for you

I had five different loads, straight out of my loading manuals and designed for the older weak-actioned rifles. All were loaded with Winchester Large Pistol primers and the RCBS 44-22-CM 200 grain bullet sized at .430". Worst of the lot was 5.5 grains of TiteGroup, which not only would not stay on my 8x11" target, it would not even stay on my 2'x4' cardboard backing! A charge of 25.0 grains Reloader 7 shot a 1 1/2" x 3" horizontally strung group, and 8.0 grains of SR 4756 shot the same size group but instead was vertically strung. Of course, I had to try some black powder too. Goex FFg at 35.0 grains shot a well-rounded 6" group, not very accurate but it sure was fun to shoot! The absolute best load was something of a surprise to me as I have never had especially good luck with Trail Boss powder. After firing five shots with 6.0 grains of Trail Boss, I looked through my spotting scope and was delighted to see two dead centers, two more just a half-inch out, and of course I had to throw one flyer an inch and a half out:

Not bad at all for a 132 year-old Winchester!
The only real problem I had was that my new extractor quit working early in the testing and I had to extract fired cartridges with a small screwdriver. In riding up over the cartridge rim like it's supposed to do, it seems the extractor has taken an upward bowed set, like maybe the metal is too soft. It won't snap down on the cartridge rim for extraction. I am going to try and straighten then harden it to give it some spring, and if that doesn't work I will find an original replacement extractor.
I'm looking forward to shooting this old rifle a lot more!!

SHASTA