LOL, @Double R I didn't go through the entire thread before posting about the great job you did on my son's pistol... :becky: I just saw your post above mine...
The same thing happened to my son.
Mr. Ronnie Redd in Suwanee (he's an ODT member but I lost his ODT info) fixed it for him. The man has done other work for me. Send me a PM if interested in contacting him and I provide his number.
Yeah, a lot of guys are poking fun. Mostly with good reason.
A bit of business advice from an old-time businessman:
You obviously have the energy and drive to create a business for yourself. But IMO, your energy is being misdirected.
My advice would be to RESEARCH your target market and...
I bought my first suppressor a month ago so I'm a newb with them. When I go to the LGS/Range where I bought, I get conjugal visits until my stamp comes in. After shooting with it the first time, I had a devil of a time removing it. I started to panic a bit because I didn't want to have to...
Wanted to give everyone an update:
@Double R solved my problem. He is a first-class machinist. He was able to back out that stripped screw and save the threads while doing it. This is the second time I've used his services and highly recommend him to anyone with a problem that requires a...
My son went to remove his rmr from his SIG P365XL in order to change the battery. One of the screws stripped and the head twisted off. This is what he's left with. Any ideas on how to remove what's left of the tiny screw?
I've changed out sights on three different Glocks using a hammer and punch. Easy peasy. Take off the Burris and do it yourself. Just take your time and it'll slide right out. Looking from the back of the pistol, tap it out moving from left to right.
You showed a picture of the gas key stating that it was "over staked". Have you tried to tighten it? I had one that looked like it was staked properly on a gun that I couldn't get to cycle. I checked/changed everything (spring, buffer, gas tube) to try to get it to work, nothing. For the...
OK, you'll need a spent .22 lr shell. Open the magazine.
See the round opening in the red follower...you need to size the .22 casing so that it will fit nearly flush in that hole. It stabilizes the follower in the magazine. Did it to the 8 mags I have and no more jamming. Let me know if...
I stopped shooting my 10/22 because it was a jam-o-matic with the Ruger mags, and I used several. I found a fix and now it runs like a top. It was the mags in my case and I suspect it's the same for you. Let me go grab some pictures of what I did to fix the problem. Back in a few minutes.
Very easy to work on. Order what you need and make a father son project out of it. Some good info:
https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/parallaxscurioandrelicfirearmsforums/the-japanese-east-asian-firearms-forum-f74/
https://oldmilitarymarkings.com/japanese_markings.html...