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February 12th, 2013, 14:50 | #256 |
Prancercise Guru
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I'm guessing you drill out the rail guide (part #18 on a G17) and enlarge the fixing hole till it won't touch the plastic. Then the energy will transfer to the pin crossing the frame.
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Airsoft, where nothing is hurt but feelings. |
February 12th, 2013, 14:55 | #257 | |
Division
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Quote:
The plastic will still have to touch Part #18, but there will be no horizontal motion as it keeps the slide secure. But if you give the part enough free lateral space, it will keep the slide from ripping the fastener post off. I'm just working on the write up. The procedure is simple, however it will require a mill and the right end mills. A drill press if you are savvy perhaps. I've already done maybe a dozen Glocks for others, they've been circulating around. The ones that came back to me I haven't seen break, and I'm hoping it stays that way.
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Weee! Last edited by Qlong; February 12th, 2013 at 15:10.. |
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February 12th, 2013, 15:30 | #258 | |
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I think the problem is that the screw itself is what absorbs the majority of the shock. And then it just wiggles around when the slide cycles and eventually that kinetic energy is transferred to screw casing and eventually wears down and breaks it. This is why the Guarder frames only break from the bottom section of the screw casing since there is that metal insert in there to protect the plastic. The problem is, it's not fully grounded to the frame to brace the impact a bit better which is why they still break.. I don't even use that bolt screw in some of my Glocks. I just bolt the chasis to the frame with SuperGlue or JB Weld. The recent way I've come with is only specific to the Guarder frame and It involves cementing the bottom section of the screw casing.... On stock frames it doesn't work because the casing will shred from the top first then make its way to the bottom.... But then again, I probably didn't do it as well as you do it....lol.
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"May you fight with the strength of ten full grown men." Last edited by e-luder; February 12th, 2013 at 15:43.. |
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February 12th, 2013, 15:42 | #259 |
Division
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Are you still using the counter sunk flat head? I'm using a button and socket fasteners, and I just thread lock that and it will stay put even allowing free lateral motion.
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Weee! |
February 12th, 2013, 15:50 | #260 | |
Quote:
THe bolt screw is "free" to move back and fourth in the chasis but it still has a some material to go latch onto (the side to side part). I tried both stock and a Canadian Tire bolt for it and got the same results. So I deemed the fix useless.... From the looks of that pic, I looks like there is a surrounding interaction point between the screw and chasis. Which, seems like there is still a transfer of shock between the frame and bolt screw in that scenario. For the screw casing to be preserved, i think that the chasis needs to not grip the screw at all. That's why I ommit using that screw sometimes...
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"May you fight with the strength of ten full grown men." |
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February 12th, 2013, 16:07 | #261 |
Division
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There is actually zero lateral forces in contact with the post of the frame, but there will always be a minimal horizontal force with each cycle. Have you done anything to the bottom of the chassis? If the fastener is not thread locked, and it's tightened again, it makes this mod moot.
I've been using a G17 for about 2 years with a little under 2000 BBs and is still intact.
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Weee! Last edited by Qlong; February 12th, 2013 at 17:35.. |
February 12th, 2013, 16:26 | #262 |
Not so much the bottom. Because of the design of my fix, the front side (under the muzzle) needed to be packed so that the chasis has a brace to take the forward shock and additinally stablize the frame.
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"May you fight with the strength of ten full grown men." |
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February 12th, 2013, 18:05 | #263 | |
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Last edited by kar120c; February 13th, 2013 at 12:14.. |
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February 14th, 2013, 03:01 | #264 | |
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Not sure how each aftermarket company will fit the best on your KJW slide but be prepared to put in some time with a needle file or a dremmel to get a good fit (as with any other slide and sight combo for any pistol).
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"May you fight with the strength of ten full grown men." |
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February 15th, 2013, 11:38 | #265 |
Help me to chose the right Hop Up chamber
I am upgrading my KJW G27, I am ordering upgrades from different stores and I need help to chose the right hop up rubber chamber.
My intention is to find the original Marui stock one, but if I can't find it on the market the chose is different; I have found the Firefly but the are sold in three variants; extra soft, soft and Hard; what is the differenze and what other upgrades influence the performances of the Hop Up rubber? |
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February 15th, 2013, 14:31 | #266 |
Hardness of the hop rubber will depend on the FPS output of your gun. If it's greater than 330FPS (on 0.20g BBs) I'd go with a hard rubber. If it's less than 270 FPS i'd go with the extra soft, and for everything else in between go with the soft.
There's also no harm in using a hard rubber if you're not quite at 330 FPS, but plan to be there eventually. Any hop up rubber designed for any TM GBB will fit across all pistols. |
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February 15th, 2013, 14:41 | #267 |
Prancercise Guru
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Any of you guys have a problem with the stock slide catch?
I just found my thumb rubs on it and locks the slide back.
__________________
Airsoft, where nothing is hurt but feelings. |
February 15th, 2013, 16:32 | #268 | |
Quote:
The pistol is a KJW G27, all stock for now |
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February 15th, 2013, 16:52 | #269 |
Prancercise Guru
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Mine is definitely the catch. I was fine until I tried switching from Modern Weaver to Isosceles.
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Airsoft, where nothing is hurt but feelings. |
February 15th, 2013, 18:42 | #270 |
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