just because my OCD is kicking in today....
your gun was made in later part of 1984 early part of 1985.
and let me know if your wanting to sell the trigger group.
i prefer the old ones to the new ones, haha!
The reason a 10-22 is as inexpensive as it is, is that the parts are mass produced. As one of the other replies says, if you own the CNC mill you can probably carve a 10-22 receiver out of whatever material (within reason) you want. If you were to pay commercial rates for someone's mill and operator, deeper pockets than mine are necessary...Wow,
Thanks for all the quick responses!
I'm thinking I'll probably get another 10/22 and hold onto this one in case I mess something up again.
Barring the cost, has anyone ever tried the following?
1) have the receiver welded back together
2) had a new receiver machined? I've noticed quite a few CAD dwgs and CNC files online
3) had a receiver 3d printed (again see the dwgs and files but not too sure about material strength)
Thanks
This was not a case of a cheap part, this was a case of applying to much force to part in a way it was never intended to receive stress. OP you are correct in saying we have all made mistakes... I have stripped and snapped and/or otherwise broken more parts than I care to remember... comes from not being terribly patient and rushing everything. Another 10/22 will suffice, but a Dlask receiver and/or barrel is a great way to go right now for you... as you already have the other required parts. If you purchase barrel and receiver, and ship the other parts, Josef will assemble the gun for you and check function. If I was in your shoes, that is the route I would take.



























