It was my understanding that these rifles were made by Marocchi for Anschutz. I've had a few. Pot metal casting is used by more than a few manufacturers.
Yes, Anschutz certainly didn't build those rifles. I knew they were made in Italy, didn't know the manufacturer.
I actually have one of these, broken in the same spot. I had planned on machining some steel side plates and fastening them with screws and epoxy, but if it's really the dog Guntech says it is....
Anybody know how these things shoot(when they're not snapped in half)?
This one was broken when I got it.
A common failure. Stingers didn't help but it would have happened anyway.
It was my understanding that these rifles were made by Marocchi for Anschutz. I've had a few. Pot metal casting is used by more than a few manufacturers.
Sure looks like a pot metal break to me.
It's not jus Stingers; lots of receiver failures in this rifle. Try pinning and Epoxy to fix; you have nothing to lose: otherwise... Landfill. If you have mags, they sell for $80-100.
It's not jus Stingers; lots of receiver failures in this rifle. Try pinning and Epoxy to fix; you have nothing to lose: otherwise... Landfill. If you have mags, they sell for $80-100.
I could see doing a repair by scabbing some steel or Aluminum panels on to the sides of the receiver. Fugly, but functional...
Extend a set of 'ears' back over to the stock sides, and profile them smooth for fit.
Like as not, try to find a place to install some form of buffer padding too.
Not a project that would amount to being worth paying for, but if you have time and materials on hand, you could make it work again, I figure...