PDA

View Full Version : Rossi R92. Need some help



Froogal
09-26-2019, 09:42 AM
I've owned this rifle for about 2 years. Chambered in .45 Colt. It is a great shooter and is accurate as I am. I am having issues with the hammer not always locking back when I work the lever. Works perfect when just testing. The rifle has done this from the time it was new. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Do I need to remove the stock and do a deep cleaning, or is something else going on? I use it in cowboy action shooting.

cwtebay
09-26-2019, 10:11 AM
I had (what sounds to be) the same issue with a Winchester 92. I posted on here and was told it was dirty, which I "knew" wasn't possible. Turns out I didn't know very much. Took it apart, deep cleaned and have had no issues since.

Sent from my Pixel 3 XL using Tapatalk

Harter66
09-26-2019, 10:45 AM
I have a note over my bench ;
Malfunctions
KISS
Keep It Simple Stupid (sometimes stupid simple but I occasionally need to be slapped.)
Clean AND Lube before you fix it .

I can't say how many times simple dirt has been the cause of major wear diagnosis .
I have a plastic cake box and a gallon of GI CLP . I can't say for sure , but 4-5 revolvers have been soaked with the grips off overnight and cycled immersed in the pan and washed out several tablespoons of crud as well as chunks of fouling out/off the frame . At least one was well kept but hadn't been deep cleaned in ......ever probably .

Pull the stock and wash out the whole action leave it very wet and cycle it a few times and repeat with whatever cheap oil like stuff you have available then a better solvent sort of stuff and lube after an hour or so of wet ,work, wash , wet , work . If you're not up to a full tear down . I hate doing the 92s , I always have to refer to a video resource for getting the bolt out and then feel stupid for forgetting that one little detail that is obvious ......that I can't remember at the moment .

Froogal
09-26-2019, 12:42 PM
Thanks guys. I've never had the stock off, but it might be time to learn what is in there. I'm thinking of saturating everything with some brake cleaner, letting it dry, repeating, and then finish up with some spray lube. Does that sound like a good idea?

dverna
09-26-2019, 02:03 PM
92's can be a challenge to work on.

View some videos beforehand.

Walks
09-26-2019, 02:47 PM
I've never let My Guns get that dirty. But a used Uberti 1873 Carbine I bought was filthy.
I just thought the springs were heavy. Became smooth as a Baby's bottom when clean and lightly oiled.
And the same with a S&W 27. The Rim recesses were so filled with crud the case heads were dragging on the Cylinder face.

I set-up .44Mag for my Chiropractor to load for Cowboy Shooting.
He's been doing it 4-5 times a Year for 20yrs. About 750 - 1,000 rds a year.

Last year his Win 94AE in .45Colt stopped working. Just jammed up with a round on the lifter.
Of course he brought it to me to fix.

Powder Residue and Break free make a great Black SLUDGE.
One of his old Vaquero's was screwing up too. The bolt wouldn't come all the way up to lock the Cylinder.
Man I have never seen any gun with that much crud in it.
Well I guess 4yrs at West Point as a Medic at the Base Hospital does NOT teach you to clean a gun.

Thank the GOOD LORD for ED's RED.

Lucky for him U.S. NAVY Corpsman are trained better.

That's the blasted Army for ya.

Old School Big Bore
09-26-2019, 03:55 PM
I got a new R92 in 45LC a few months ago. While it was in transit I also ordered some upgrade parts and a how-to-hotrod-the-R92 DVD from a cowboy shooter who seems to be a pretty good authority on the gun. I was already familiar with the B92 and B53 but his video, besides being a great refresher, clarified a few things that were still mysterious to me.
Cycling the gun, it felt like it was full of blaster grit. It would not cycle with my 45LC dummy rounds, and when I did get one into the chamber and ejected it, it went across the entire shop 'briskly' enough that I was glad I hadn't been in its way. The trigger was like a staple gun. I removed the wood and guts and you would not believe the crud and metal shavings I flushed out of a NIB gun. Every part in the action, the receiver and magazine tube were absolutely filthy. I clamped it in a padded vise, muzzle up, and blew it out with carburetor cleaner. There was enough metal scrap along with black goop that I don't see how it passed QC, much less how Rossi had the gall to ship something like that. The guy who makes the video and kit says that Rossi does a slap-dash job of making and assembling the parts, then uses heavy springs to make everything work, which makes the R92 hard to cycle and accelerates wear. I took my B92 and B53 apart and compared the fit and finish to the R92, and it was obvious where Rossi had skimped on fitting and where they had used overly powerful springs to compensate for their lack of proper fitment and polishing.
While I had it apart, I polished the chamber with a Flex-Hone that I'd epoxied into a length of steel brake line so it would reach through the action. I slimmed the spring portion of the extractor and the loading gate, the trigger return spring, the cartridge guide spring, cut two coils off the mainspring, and replaced the ejector spring with one from the kit I'd bought with the DVD. I polished all the friction points and sharp places discussed in the video and watched every visible interaction of the parts to spot and fix any glitches - and there were a lot of them. I also replaced the plastic mag follower with a steel one from the kit. I left the magazine spring alone because it was within spec. When I reassembled it, I loaded it full of dummies and cycled them through. The polishing and reduction of various spring tensions made it feed and handle as it was intended - it is now as smooth as my Brownings and original, vintage Winchester 92s I've handled. The trigger is much improved too.
Once the R92 was range-worthy, I took it out to warm it up and it actually shot pretty well.
For anyone interested in improving their R92, and can do minor 'smithing, I recommend 'Steve's Gunz' action kit, including the DVD. I also replaced the in-bolt rotating firing pin block with Steve's peep sight and recommend it as well. If you buy the sight, get a dovetail filler and some plug screws, as the issue rear sight covers four optic-mount screws and you'll want to plug them. The peep works with the issue Rossi front sight.

Froogal
09-26-2019, 04:24 PM
I've owned this rifle for about 2 years. Chambered in .45 Colt. It is a great shooter and is accurate as I am. I am having issues with the hammer not always locking back when I work the lever. Works perfect when just testing. The rifle has done this from the time it was new. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Do I need to remove the stock and do a deep cleaning, or is something else going on? I use it in cowboy action shooting.

I bought the rifle brand new. Cleaned and oiled it before firing the first shot and I have cleaned and oiled it after every shooting session. If it is dirty, it didn't happen on my watch.

Old School Big Bore
09-26-2019, 04:57 PM
To go back to your initial question, yes, do a deep cleaning - ya gotta pull the stock to pull the lower tang to get to the rest of the guts, and while you have the tang out you can eyeball the hammer/trigger surfaces and figure out what's wrong. Maybe a previously undetected metal chip or lead or brass shaving got into the full-cock notch, or similar.

Texas by God
09-26-2019, 07:33 PM
The best lever action do it yourself kit out there. By Rossi.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk

Froogal
09-27-2019, 10:02 AM
To go back to your initial question, yes, do a deep cleaning - ya gotta pull the stock to pull the lower tang to get to the rest of the guts, and while you have the tang out you can eyeball the hammer/trigger surfaces and figure out what's wrong. Maybe a previously undetected metal chip or lead or brass shaving got into the full-cock notch, or similar.

Thank you. That is what I plan to do.

AnthonyB
09-27-2019, 10:32 AM
A lot of people disparage the Rossi 92, and I understand their point. But for me, and I mean for me only and maybe not everyone else, they are a fine rifle once they are slicked up a bit as an earlier poster described. I disassemble all my guns to clean them, so the M92 process is not a mystery. If you can do a M94 you can do a 92. I am not a Rossi fanatic; I just spent more than $800 on a Henry Big Boy All Weather in 44 Mag and have another BB 357. They are both good rifles, but very heavy for the caliber and the 44 required a new hammer spring. The 357 was good from the box; the Henry 45-70 had to go back for a huge scratch on the loading tube I didn’t notice when I bought it. I have no experience with the Marlin 1894 and can’t comment on them, but the the Rossi 92 is the Best Buy for the money IF you are the type to tinker with your guns.
There are several videos available on M92 tear down; I also recommend the Steve’s Gunz kit. I agree with the others that a good cleaning will likely solve the problem.
Tony

trapper9260
09-27-2019, 10:58 AM
On my Rossi 92 357 mag it had lock up on me and the 2 bars was hang up so I remove them and then was able to close the lever . But after put the bars back the gun will not fire. Brought it to my gunsmith and found out that and piece in it broke and some other part he need to replace he told me that is the first time he hear it happened . He said one part he can get for it but is know to break so he will make one that way will not have that problem . I love the gun shoot great and what ever I put in it.

cwlongshot
09-27-2019, 01:35 PM
Now you know why most gun smiths charge gun cleaning on EVERY GUN they take in.

SO FLIPPIN OFTEN, just that good real Cleaning can fix problems.

If nothing else, once clean its easier to work on. You know and can better see what you have in front of you that might be worn broken or cracked.

CW

MI2600
09-27-2019, 10:46 PM
Good YouTube help on the Rossi:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0r0l5MRNaU

Froogal
09-28-2019, 09:13 AM
Good YouTube help on the Rossi:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0r0l5MRNaU

Thank you. I will watch it.

Froogal
09-28-2019, 02:33 PM
Okay. I watched that video, as well as another video from the same guy. As I do not yet own a good set of pin punches, I elected to not do a complete disassembly, but instead I just removed the stock and then took a can of brake cleaner to it. I sprayed it into everywhere I could get it. There was some black residue that ran out at first. I kept spraying until the brake cleaner ran out clean. Worked the action a few times, sprayed some more, worked the action some more, and then applied a good dose of oil to everything that moved. Put the stock back on and worked the action some more. The action DOES feel a bit more crisp now, so maybe I fixed it. Might get out to the range tomorrow and then I will know.

Froogal
09-30-2019, 03:28 PM
Next question. I found a website that has parts for lever action rifles. Kind of caters to the Rossi. Spring kits, magazine followers, etc. It is called "Palo Verde gun parts" Any of you folks familiar with them?

Old School Big Bore
09-30-2019, 03:46 PM
Not familiar with Palo Verde but will Czech them out. Brownells and Gun Parts Inc (Numrich) have 92 parts also. You might have to look under Browning 92/53 listings or Winchester 92 for some of the parts but almost everything interchanges except the parts related to the leaf versus coil mainsprings, and the wood. The Rossi upper tang seems to be larger than the others in general.

Speedo66
09-30-2019, 04:04 PM
I've had good luck with these people. Same kind of stuff: followers, spring kits, etc. Good prices, low shipping cost. https://www.thesmithshop.com/

Froogal
09-30-2019, 05:31 PM
I've had good luck with these people. Same kind of stuff: followers, spring kits, etc. Good prices, low shipping cost. https://www.thesmithshop.com/

Thank you. Interesting to note that the smithshop has the Palo Verde spring kits.

JoeJames
09-30-2019, 06:00 PM
Try Steve's Gunz - specializes in R92's.

Froogal
10-01-2019, 07:40 AM
Try Steve's Gunz - specializes in R92's.

At one time Steve's gunz accepted payment only through paypal. Is it still that way? I do not do paypal.

JoeJames
10-01-2019, 09:26 AM
At one time Steve's gunz accepted payment only through paypal. Is it still that way? I do not do paypal.No, I paid him by check. Got in a nice trigger sppring. Original total trigger pull = 5 1/2 pounds: original spring tension was 3 1/2 pounds, friction of hammer and trigger = 2 pounds; installed new trigger spring from Steve's Gunz and total trigger pull was reduced down to 3 1/2 - 4 pounds.

AnthonyB
10-01-2019, 10:18 AM
I had a problem with an order from him once. Don’t remember now what the problem was, and this was after several perfect orders. I sent an email that his wife answered and she immediately resolved the problem with no issues. Doesn’t address the PayPal question, but they are good people.
Tony

DDJ
10-11-2019, 06:35 PM
Next question. I found a website that has parts for lever action rifles. Kind of caters to the Rossi. Spring kits, magazine followers, etc. It is called "Palo Verde gun parts" Any of you folks familiar with them?

I've used spring kits from Lee Gunslinger, Steve's gunz and Palo Verde. Palo Verde gets my vote. It's a few bucks more but an excellent spring kit for Rossi's

Froogal
10-12-2019, 09:18 AM
I've used spring kits from Lee Gunslinger, Steve's gunz and Palo Verde. Palo Verde gets my vote. It's a few bucks more but an excellent spring kit for Rossi's

Thank you! I'll probably be getting a couple of those kits, along with the magazine spring and followers. Even if I don't change them out, I'll have some spare parts.

Tazman1602
10-14-2019, 05:22 PM
Try Steve's Gunz - specializes in R92's.

+1 for Steves Gunz, several years back when R92's were only $400 and Marlin had been sold and was making Remlins that weren't real nice I took a chance on one and bought the DVD and upgrades from Steves Gunz. At first my .357 R92 did_not function/feed well - especially with cast bullets. Once Steves parts were put in and springs adjusted it was a JOY, I now own a half dozen in various calibers, all have been resprung and gunsmithed with help from Steves DVD, and all will feed/function with whatever I put in them.

No they're not JM stamped Marlins, but gunsmithed properly they are (or used to be - I just checked prices on them, GEEZ...) a real joy.

Art

Froogal
10-15-2019, 10:25 AM
+1 for Steves Gunz, several years back when R92's were only $400 and Marlin had been sold and was making Remlins that weren't real nice I took a chance on one and bought the DVD and upgrades from Steves Gunz. At first my .357 R92 did_not function/feed well - especially with cast bullets. Once Steves parts were put in and springs adjusted it was a JOY, I now own a half dozen in various calibers, all have been resprung and gunsmithed with help from Steves DVD, and all will feed/function with whatever I put in them.

No they're not JM stamped Marlins, but gunsmithed properly they are (or used to be - I just checked prices on them, GEEZ...) a real joy.

Art

YES!! The price is what convinced me to go with Rossi. About 1/3 to 1/2 the price of anything else.

trapper9260
10-15-2019, 10:29 AM
On my Rossi 92 357 mag it had lock up on me and the 2 bars was hang up so I remove them and then was able to close the lever . But after put the bars back the gun will not fire. Brought it to my gunsmith and found out that and piece in it broke and some other part he need to replace he told me that is the first time he hear it happened . He said one part he can get for it but is know to break so he will make one that way will not have that problem . I love the gun shoot great and what ever I put in it.

Got my Rossi back it had a broke part in it. He told me that it is a common thing in them he found. It is all fix. He test fire it and he said he try it at 100 yards and had no problem hit a 6" plate. That was with the factory ammo he used. He knows it will do better on the groups with reloads.

Froogal
10-21-2019, 01:43 PM
Just an update. After doing a thorough cleaning on the Rossi, We held our October cowboy action shoot yesterday. It behaved flawlessly. Hammer cocked back each and every time. I'd like to say the shooter also behaved flawlessly, but that would be a fiction story. Doesn't matter. I had fun.

Gaterskiner
10-23-2019, 02:53 PM
had a problem with a Rossi 92. Found the hammer was poorly cast. over half of the full cock notch was not there. like pulling teeth to get Rossi to fix it.

Froogal
10-27-2019, 03:33 PM
I bought the rifle brand new. Cleaned and oiled it before firing the first shot and I have cleaned and oiled it after every shooting session. If it is dirty, it didn't happen on my watch.


It WAS dirty. A liberal spraying of brake cleaner caused a LOT of black crud to run out. I oiled it and put it back together, and it has not malfunctioned since.

Petander
10-27-2019, 06:51 PM
Good YouTube help on the Rossi:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0r0l5MRNaU

And here is part one,disassembly:


https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=fsFDc4s9V5A

superior
11-15-2019, 06:31 PM
After a shooting session with my NIB stainless 20” Rossi, I decided to take the plunge, watch a YouTube video, and fully disassemble it. After a thorough cleaning, my brand new Rossi functioned like a Brand new Rossi! (Even better than before). Disassembly was the best thing I could have done , not only for the removal of factory crud, but for inspiring confidence in the procedure itself. Rossi is a manufacturer of CNC machines ( I recently discovered ) , but it seems they could pay more attention to their finished products. I must say that my rifle has never failed to function flawlessly, however I’m glad to have given it a thorough cleaning. I absolutely love it as a companion to the RBH 7.5. .

Handloader109
11-15-2019, 06:46 PM
My Year old one runs the reloads I put through it without a hickup and I can hit what I can see. Love it, should shoot it more often.