So as not to resurrect this really old thread--
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=6474
-I am starting a new one.
Some work I did for a very good friend and his wife, going back to 1988. Two “pin” guns. The chromed one is from ’88, the blued one a couple years later. Both have sent many a bowling pin to their reward. Felipe was/is a great pin shooter, we shot together at Second Chance for many years. We would go to local matches in Northern IN where he was the police to help warm up. Usually one or the other of us cleaned up and then the other cleaned up what was left.
Felipe was my first real “friend who was the police”. I was already pretty sure, but Felipe really proved it to me, that police are a lot like regular people. When I saw how he behaved off duty, treated people with decency and respect, always giving the benefit of the doubt (but always ready to be proven wrong), I was impressed. We first met at Second Chance probably about 1984 and are great friends to this day. Besides still being a great shooter he is a Category 5 Grill Master. Taught me a lot about good food, he did..... rare is the day when words like "cilantro" and "chorizo" are not spoken in my kitchen. When he's back in the area I get invited to family events, a big honor for me.
Both comps are pretty much the same. Threaded-in second blast baffle. This is a manufacturing expedient, a cleaning expedient, and a styling thing. Each gun done this way came with the little spanner. The threaded-in baffle bottoms out and shoulders off, sealing the threads from getting hopelessly packed with lead and crud. The recoil spring plunger, made from a grade-8 bolt, extends forward of the slide, telescoping into the comp. Longer springs are happier, longer-living springs. The front sight is integral to the compensator body, that is, part of the same chunk of steel. Won't be falling off or coming loose until sent to the smelter. Hope that never happens.
The first baffle is a piece of 3/32 flat ground stock set into a slot EDM’d in place. It is then silver-brazed. You can see here where the chrome did not “like” the silver. Never figured out why that was, that chrome and silver usually do not get along. I mean c'mon guys, you're both metals, you're both on the Table of Elements, you're both shiny and expensive..... you guys are the rock stars of the metal worl........ wait a minute, rock stars? Not getting along? OK, now I think I see what's going on here.
All the things Felipe does well…. He is, how shall I say it, how to put a positive spin on it….? How about: Good news! He does not suffer from OCD when it comes to maintaining guns! I will chisel the lead out of this comp, literally-- before I return it to him. I make a chisel out of mild steel and put it in a vibrating engraving tool-- and mini-jack-hammer the lead out. Sounds crude but it works and as the Gunsmith's Hipocratic Oath sez, it
does no harm.
He called me one day a couple years after I built this for him and was sick about having bulged the barrel. I rebarreled it for him. These comps were made from a 2” diameter bar of 4140 starting about 7” long, so the gooseneck was integral to the compensator. In the rebarrel I had to cut the gooseneck off a bit as it had bulged with the barrel. What you see here is the repair, and as was/is my habit with this kind of thing I don’t rely on any kind of wundercompound to hold things together. It’s gotta be steel on steel or silver braze. Comps were threaded on and a good silver joint said “never, ever coming loose”.

Here’s what the mag release looks like. A pivoting lever working off a little stud pocketed into the frame and sliver-brazed in place. The cut in the grip panel keeps the pivot pin in place. It does not give a leverage advantage, it just gives more button area. Serrations on the button (not visible here) are very early Conamyds…. cut with a cutter I made and not EDM’d into place.
