brownells sells the good ones.... maybe fulton armory as well.
or you could roll peen the buttress forward and never need shims again. Very easy permanent fix for aligning gas port and tightening up the system.
Give Barney a shout.

High Calibre in Mission had some last time I popped in there.
shims don't address gas port alignment.
shims are for lazy people who aren't even paying attention to port alignment when they blindly add shims to solve a loose gas lock and then wonder later why thier rifle is still shooting +3moa.
no, I'm not "Hungry/Tactical Teacher" LOL (too lazy to use bold for azzkissing cool power)
but there is a better way and in my world, gas cylinder shims are a waste of money and a gimmick.
not trying to be a #### but some of you need to quit running to Barney and learn to do some simple things to your rifles that "will" improve them and increase potential and more importantly repeatable accuracy.
I tuned a few hundred of these rifles both professionally and non professionally and got paid good money to do so. Gas cylinder shims were an item you could not find in my shop even today. It's a simple process and if you wrap and tape the cylinder assembly up by the flash hider, you do not need to remove the flash hider. Unlike shims where the barrel must be naked.
Shimming assumes all the dimensions are correct between the buttress and the port. I've guaged 100's of norinco barrels and this dimension is often no in spec and when people shim, they are actually closing of a portion of the gas port. This affects your rifle and it's accuracy as well as reliable function due to gas port fouling.
Now, it's a simple thing to lay the buttress at an angle on a steel surface and gently tap it with a hammer as you evenly rotate the barrel. The light hammer strikes should be made with a steel hammer with a light sweeping motion to the hit, it the direction the buttress needs to go. You are creating a shoulder that when the gas lock is tightened, will crush form behind the cylinder, negating the need for shims.
Work slow, trial fit often and stop when the gas lock comes hand tight at 4'oclock. Then tighten with gas lock wrench to 6clock. Back off the gas lock and ensure that it now comes hand tight at 4:30 to 5 oclock. It should stay at that tension for many thousand rounds VS shims that tend to degrade and pound out over a much shorter time.
It's a fix it and forget it method to never needing shims again.
Now if one does shimming or roll peening and isn't using a port alignment device to see what is happening in there.... the whole process, either one, is a waste of time.
My method...... Roll peen (or shim if you must) the gas cylinder barrel buttress untill perfect gas port alignment is achieved, then chose an appropriate gas lock that comes hand tight at 4:30/5oclock.
it's that simple.
OK about what I thought. So my question is if the ports line up with the gas system bottomed out without shims , what would be. Wrong with removing a few thou off the locking ring to make it come tight at 530 position ?
i suppose you could try that , let us know
Roll peening the shoulder on the gas cylinder barrel buttress is such a simple process. Gun smiths have been roll peening barrels with recess shoulders since time began. There is an appropriate way to do these things so hammering away on the barrel is not necessary.
If you were here in front of me and saw it done you would understand how simple and safe the practice is and if done with care, the adjustment would be barely noticeable visually. You don't hammer the whole buttress, just the very edge the gas cylinder butts against, creating a recess shoulder.
anyhow, was just trying to help, I'm not trying to preach, was just offering a simple proven technique that would save folks time and money , especially those with welded on flash hiders that don't want to hammer thier FH off.
in your case..... I would just get another gas lock or two find the one that fits the best and sell the others in the EE.
or..... try the milling machine adjustments and let us know how things go.
I've deepened the gas plug recess on a few problematic rifles that were short stroking and all other possible remedies were satisfied and still problems. added a bit more gas volume to the cylinder to increase dwell time a fraction and voila..... no more short stroking in those particular rifles.
So try the gas lock adjustment, then test fire with a few weights of ammo. If dwell time has been seriously affected by the plug being set deeper..... you will know. If it has, deepening the plug would be the way to go. I'd be hesitant to mill off the hardened surfaces of the mouth of the plug tho as the piston might peen it out and who knows?
I should add a note in edit here.
I came to my knowledge and understanding of the M14 gas cylinder and it's function and affect on repeatable accuracy from both the writings/posts and direct conversations on the phone with Gus Fischer, Tim of warbird customs and a few others. Also the kuhnhaussen shop manual for technical reference for US spec parts.
I took the advice from these folks and applied it the best I could to the chinese rifles and I did so quite successfully I think.
So in the end, I can only give the best advice I can and folks can take it or leave it.
i suppose you could try that , let us know
Roll peening the shoulder on the gas cylinder barrel buttress is such a simple process. Gun smiths have been roll peening barrels with recess shoulders since time began. There is an appropriate way to do these things so hammering away on the barrel is not necessary.
If you were here in front of me and saw it done you would understand how simple and safe the practice is and if done with care, the adjustment would be barely noticeable visually. You don't hammer the whole buttress, just the very edge the gas cylinder butts against, creating a recess shoulder.
anyhow, was just trying to help, I'm not trying to preach, was just offering a simple proven technique that would save folks time and money , especially those with welded on flash hiders that don't want to hammer thier FH off.
in your case..... I would just get another gas lock or two find the one that fits the best and sell the others in the EE.
or..... try the milling machine adjustments and let us know how things go.
I've deepened the gas plug recess on a few problematic rifles that were short stroking and all other possible remedies were satisfied and still problems. added a bit more gas volume to the cylinder to increase dwell time a fraction and voila..... no more short stroking in those particular rifles.
So try the gas lock adjustment, then test fire with a few weights of ammo. If dwell time has been seriously affected by the plug being set deeper..... you will know. If it has, deepening the plug would be the way to go. I'd be hesitant to mill off the hardened surfaces of the mouth of the plug tho as the piston might peen it out and who knows?
I should add a note in edit here.
I came to my knowledge and understanding of the M14 gas cylinder and it's function and affect on repeatable accuracy from both the writings/posts and direct conversations on the phone with Gus Fischer, Tim of warbird customs and a few others. Also the kuhnhaussen shop manual for technical reference for US spec parts.
I took the advice from these folks and applied it the best I could to the chinese rifles and I did so quite successfully I think.
So in the end, I can only give the best advice I can and folks can take it or leave it.




























