Erma LA22
Moderators: Bullseye, Moderators
Erma LA22
I am trying to fix an old Erma LA22 22 pistol for my Father-in-law. It appears that the sear is broken and I am trying to locate a correct sear. The main body of the sear is round and the part that catches the firing pin is flat.I have seen two different sear listed @ bobs gun parts http://www.gun-parts.com/erma/ .
One is listed as a flat type and one is listed as a round type. The sear shown in the schematic appears to be a fully round cylinder and the one in my F.I.L's gun is machined flat where it contacts the firing pin. Any Erma experts here that can shed some light on this? I am also wondering if anyone knows of any other company that may have parts for the gun. [email protected].
One is listed as a flat type and one is listed as a round type. The sear shown in the schematic appears to be a fully round cylinder and the one in my F.I.L's gun is machined flat where it contacts the firing pin. Any Erma experts here that can shed some light on this? I am also wondering if anyone knows of any other company that may have parts for the gun. [email protected].
I'm not really sure Bullseye. The part that is broken is part#5 but it has a flattened hook the engages the firing fin.I have seen that part looking both round and with a flattened hook in different schematics. The schematic at http://www.gun-parts.com/erma/ is actually showing an Erma EP22. I contacted http://www.leesgunparts.com/ this morning and talked to the salesman on the phone about the correct part I needed. He assured me that he had the correct sear for a LA22 and I ordered the part. Hopefully he understood what I was taking about.
I just took the gun completely apart and the sear in the LA22 is round with a flattened hook to catch the firing pin and it has one pin in it. It looks like what the guy at Lee's was describing.
The different models have completely different mechanisms to actuate the firing pin.
I just took the gun completely apart and the sear in the LA22 is round with a flattened hook to catch the firing pin and it has one pin in it. It looks like what the guy at Lee's was describing.
The different models have completely different mechanisms to actuate the firing pin.
- blue68f100
- Master contributor
- Posts: 1997
- Joined: Mon May 25, 2009 10:31 pm
- Location: Piney Woods of East Texas