Keep us posted on how it stays together. I did the same experiment but with Bisonite back in 1987 on a TRW gas cylinder. All stayed together until I knocked the glued gas cylinder off the barrel for an annual cleaning.
It fell apart when the wooden block and mallet were applied. No sweat, It was now a good reason to take it to my welder buddies and weld things up properly. It cost me a couple of coffees...
Glad you tried it!!!
Like Mrs Frizzle of the magic school bus show says, "discover & make mistakes."
And this is from your teacher, "It's a Norinco; you can only make it better."
Cheers and look after Da noobs around here
Barney
Dunno how much interest there is but if 16 or 20 guys were in, I'd consider runnin a clinic mid to late april
Yup, I trust all my TIG needs to Tony. He's got all my gas assembly unitizing jigs down on the coast.
He was actually lightin a fire under my azz to get my m14 clinics back up and running out of the shop out back at his place. We'll see, I'm keeping my work load light and my comittments lighter hehehe....my two favorite words right now are.... Fish on![]()
I might fly out for it just to meet to meet the M14 legend.
I would really like to participate in one of these clinics. Can you keep us informed?
Here's an update for any of you who might consider cold weld unitizing as an option.
Since the first post I have fired over 500 rounds ranging from pricey hunting rounds to Chinese milsurp and everything in between. The JB weld has held fast with no signs or weakening. Overall I could say my groups are tighter by about 1 MOA. I average 2 MOA with irons at 100 yards.
I think the trick to a lasting bond is in surface prep. I spent a lot of time sanding and degreasing contact areas.
Anyway, it worked for me so there's no reason it shouldn't work for you and if you can't afford to do it right, at least you can do it right now.
There is an outfit in surrey BC that specializes in Tig weld unitizing. I can pass on their info if needed.