An amateur gunsmiths best tool to start by mastering is the humble file
You can never have too many of them and they are not all created equally
An amateur gunsmiths best tool to start by mastering is the humble file
You can never have too many of them and they are not all created equally
On the subject of magazine spring sourcing:
https://m.aliexpress.com/item/4001079872684.html
Last edited by Cordite; 28-08-2022 at 03:31 PM.
An itch ... is ... a desire to scratch
Those aliexpress springs look very interesting - probly find exact shape/tension for mags amongst them.
Bottom line - there are alot of very good points coming up. Access to springs in NZ and aliexpress, making of flat mag springs, machining of occasional pins/extractors, and poss CNC/3D of unavailable mags. But alot of mags are still available from the UK site. This outfit (thanks threefootsix) has all sorts of mags for our makes - CZ (for Norinco JW15/27 too), Marlin, also Voere, Krico and Winchester etc models. I'm going to do a trial run thru police with 67 form, plus import agent, order a batch of say Marlin bolt/semi mags, and see how easy it is. (Click on magazines here and you'll see this company's big range):
https://riflemags.co.uk/magazines/
Means we need not have 'orphan' problems with alot of our rimfires or other out-of-production makes/model rifles. I'll give this another week or so, check the import process, then go through posts and do an executive summary - key points. Identify exactly what we can do to ensure parts supply for the rifles. I don't think we are going to have a problem. Bit helping one another and some kiwi ingenuity and I don't see anything we can't manage.
This is the most reliable magazine I have ever used
Lots of moving parts but it feeds all different brands and bullet weights reliably
The rifles that use this type of magazine are usually of a simpler design and have fewer parts and are therefore easier to keep running long term
And they generally use less ammunition
the 3D printing or backyard wooden or plastic shaped magwell blockers,turn your garden variety mag fed bolt action into one of them there ammunition friendly slow firing rifles,funnily enough I learnt to shoot with a borrowed TOZ that had no magazine and that was a good 43-44 years ago...so its not just a new issue.
75/15/10 black powder matters
One technique of joining plastic across cracks is to have a number of tiny threads of steel wire cable, like 5mm long. Lay them across the gap, and touch with a hot soldering iron till they "sink in". Do each thread a slight angle from the preceding one so they "key".
Easy to forget that the only order-of-magnitude (ten times faster) increase in firing rate was in going from muzzle loader to breech loader.
That said, fast follow-up shots really require that imperfect, inorganic magazine.
An itch ... is ... a desire to scratch
Now if my failing memory banks are in any way still functional - that model Norinco was a knock off of a Stirling from the Phillipines, which was in itself a knock off of one of the Eastern European .22's - maybe an early BRNO/CZ or somesuch?
There is a steel-bodied mag you can get that does fit the Norinco mag well, I'm trying to recall what needed to be tweaked and it might have been the top of the mag out a little and the feed lips in a twitch as the plastic mag body was a bit chunkier everywhere apart from the front. The piss off with those, was that the mags work ok with the split front when they are in the gun you just can't load the damn things. I think with mine, I tried a plastic weld on the front first with a steel rod behind it to keep the shape. That split again after a few weeks, but with the new melted plastic in there the rapidfix powder stuck nicely.
I see 3 possible outcomes. I am really hoping for the first one.
1) Gunsmiths get more business, and more money changes hands, resulting in a happier, safer shooting community serviced by a healthy cohort of well trained and experienced smiths. This is the high road.
2) The pool of old firearms in circulation begins to malfunction due to worn or broken parts, and these are scrapped and replaced with newer models. Everyone stays happy and safe because of this. This is the middle road.
3) A new cohort of stingy, unskilled Bubbas emerge from the woodwork, and most older firearms become increasingly unreliable and unsafe. Sadly, most of the resultant deaths are Bubba's mates, rather than Bubba himself, so the problem perpetuates. This is the low road, paved with good intentions.
Sadly, government controls over firearms and parts, as well as who may work or make these and intervention and restriction on the importation of parts will favour the middle and low roads. The high middle roads are walked by those with enough funds, while bubba walks the low road either because he doesn't have enough to get a professional on the job, or buy a working firearm, or he suffers from the Dunning Kruger effect and believes his abilities with firearms is at God-level..
Last edited by Bol Tackshin; 29-08-2022 at 02:53 PM.
Applicable to REM 788’s and TOZ 17’s and probably others as well given that there are still a lot of these functioning and will continue to do so for a long time to come. Can’t understand the Ruskies not doing a couple of big runs of TOZ mags. They would all sell in a heartbeat and be easy money for them.
“Age is a very high price to pay for maturity”
Just found these guys, no affiliation but worth a look.
https://www.abreid.co.nz/page/gunsmithing/
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