Colt Crane Bushing Tool
I purchased this Crane Bushing Tool while working on a 1969 Colt Detective Special project. Worked Perfect.
Would you recommend this?
Yes, I would recommend to a friend
Oscar T. Black
Quality tool for removing the castle nut from cylinder on the Colt 38-Spl. Detective revolver.
crane bushing tool
I was contacted when item was back in stock .Shipping was fast.
Colt crane bushing tool
Using this tool, took me seconds to remove the bushing
Problem solved
Instantly And easily removed the threaded crane bushing on a 100 year old Colt Police Positive Special. There are two sizes on one tool. The small end fit perfectly. If people are breaking them or wearing them out, they should be reminded to use penetrating oil or boil the part in detergent laced water for 20 minutes. Penetrating/displacement oil like G96 sold here on Brownells. Thanks again Brownells for a good solution to a problem.
Expensive, but works
It’s expensive for being limited to one purpose, but it works. Just be careful about the amount of pressure you apply.
Also fits Colt New Service revolvers
I was pleasantly surprised to discover that this tool also fits the crane bushings of Colt New Service revolvers. A well made tool but it has its limitations, a corroded bushing that is stuck in the crane will break the tool. You can however easily file down the shoulder of the tool and expose new "teeth".
Good concept--Poor Execution
Worked fine one time. Rounded off on the second gun. Probably needs better heat treat, or better steel.
If I could leave lower rating, I would.
This broke before I even out any pressure against it. I sent emails to brownells about the problem and they couldn't be bothered to even respond. Waste of time and money. Brownells clearly dont stand by thier inferior products. It's a shame.
Looks nice, but...
Nifty little tool and looks well made. But after soaking my rust free Colt 357 ejector rod assembly for over a week, and applying an astonishingly small amount of pressure, the teeth snapped off. Not happy, I'm out the money and my revolver remains in limbo. I'd pay for one sturdy enough to do the job. Next time "try titanium"