To my knowledge they are all pinned and spot welded. The purpose of this technique of pinning and welding is to avoid fusing or damaging the actual threads which would damage or destroy them. The pin is the only thing keeping he muzzle device in place not the weld , the weld only holds the pin in place. All I did to remove mine is , with a 1\8" grinding disc grind away at the surface of the weld ( about 3 millimeters down , such a small spot does not have much penetration ) , then once I could see a small discoloured ring around the pin I new I was past where the two had fused. Then all I did was take a 3\4" wrench and with the barrel in a vice just rock the muzzle device back and forth to loosen out the pin till it just fell out. Be sure not to overturn the flash hider when wiggling the pin out so that you dont damage the threads.
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Excellent post.
And exactly correct.
I followed the process on my XCR-L chambered in 7.62x39mm. It took me a couple deep breaths to commit to the process and about an hour of cautious grinding, but following your guide I managed to do this with a POS dremel and a cutoff blade.
The tense moments were the 3-4 mm mark. Right around that point where you start wondering if there even IS a pin in your flash hider because all you have managed to expose is a blend of indistinguishable shiny metal. I'd be lying if I said that the metal and pin were anything less than smooth and indistinguishable from each other.
But you gut check and keep going. And sooner or later, those small occasional movements side to side with a crescent wrench cause the factory break started to reveal the outline of the steel pin.
You saved me a pile in fees to have this simple process done. Because of your work I am installed my AAC 51T break; and came out cash ahead.
cheers
Removing material should be done like any other metal working operation. Slowly and carefully.
Using either a dremel, grinder or hand file, you should remove approximately 3mm of material from the spot weld. At the start, you will only see shiny bare metal as the weld has blended the pin together with the factory muzzle brake's steel.
As you progress, you will start to see a black ring develop around the pin.
The first picture here should show you how deep in this pin goes.
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I was worried about how much metal was being removed. But reasoned that the bare minimum I could rapidly remove was a depth equal to the machined 'flats' that a wrench is intended to lock against. Hopefully this picture shows the relief in sufficient detail.
Removal of any further material was done around the steel pin. Not on the pin itself.
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At this point, I used a crescent wrench to rock the brake back and forth. Not hard clockwise to try and remove. Rather, gently back and forth as if trying to break a coat hanger wire with pliers. The point was to assist in breaking any remaining metal bond on the weld.
Once I had worked it back and forth sufficiently, the pin actually popped out completely. From there it was a simple matter of unscrewing the brake (counter clockwise) until it was completely off the firearm.
Here is a shot of the pin as it came out of the brake.
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You get another really good idea of the depth of material removed here. You should pay VERY close attention to this picture with the steel pin. See how much deeper the pin goes into the muzzle brake? That shows the broad safety margin you have in terms of material you can remove without damaging the barrel threads.
Despite my worries to the contrary, I wasn't even close to the threads. No more than half way through the brake and the job was done.
One final angle for those considering similar home surgery
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Was it worth the effort?
I certainly think so. Installing the AAC 51T brake was not difficult. The threads were not damaged or marred in any way. So a couple of tries seating the new brake and the addition of two shims had the task completed in entirety.
Here's the completed assembly.
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I hope the pictures are satisfactory and help you overcome any reservations about doing this easy job yourself.
Looks great!
My Battlecomp BABC should be here Monday, so I'll be venturing into this project probably tomorrow. Your post is exactly what I needed to see in order to begin the task, thank you.
and price a new 6.8spc barrel.... F**k me....
If I have a drill press, would you think it better to drill the pin out?
I do have a small press and I think that is my next course of action. I only hope I have better luck drilling! LOL!