Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Anschutz Front Sight Adapter for the TF79

Took a couple weeks off airgun posting due to increased workload at the shop.  It's a seasonal business and we're in full season.  I have been making things--but mostly machine tooling related items.  I managed to eek out a project yesterday for my TF79 target rifle.  I had already upgraded the rear target sight with a Baikal diopter, and recently found a spare Anschutz front sight in one of my parts bins.  Aside from the higher overall quality of the Anschutz unit compared to the TF sight, I've got a lot of inserts for the Anschutz, so it makes sense to get it onto the rifle.















A piece of 1" round aluminum predrilled with a 0.500" though hole will make for a good start.




















The barrel OD on the Tech Force is 15mm--I don't have a 15mm bit and sorely need to buy one.  So, guess I'm doing it the hard way.




















Through drilled with a 9/16" bit to provide clearance for a boring bar.





















The boring bar barely fit, but that's enough.  Bored out the hole to just over 15mm.




















Faced the end.





















Used the compound to cut a taper.  Just eyeballed it, as there was no need for a specific angle.




















With the taper done,  the piece was moved to the mill.  The card stock should help prevent marring the sides of the work from the vise jaws.  Just going to do something simple.  Again, no real measurements.  Only noted how deep the cut was.



















Cut a flat.





















Flipped the piece and cut a flat 180 degrees from the first.  Matched the depth of the first cut so they were equal.




















A high speed pass on each side left a nice finish.





















Sanded the piece to 500 grit with an oil soaked piece of emery cloth. 





















The Anschutz sight still patiently waits.




















Needs dovetails as well as some set screw holes for mounting to the barrel.




















The Tech Force barrel had a milled flat for a set screw exactly 120mm from the muzzle.  Lacking a proper height gage, (Yes, I'm a bit under-tooled) I adjusted a surface gage to the correct height and scribed the mark.



















Did some rough layout for the dovetails.  The Anschutz sight looks like it requires 60 degree angles.




















This was alarmingly uneventful.














































Located the hole position for the first set screw.





























It was spotted and drilled.




























Then tapped M5 x 0.8mm--the largest size screw that would fit in the milled pocket on the TF barrel.




























Decided to add two more set screws to the adapter.  



















Just needs some clean up.





















































Sight screwed in place.





















Installed.































I took some time to get the new front sight in a similar location height-wise from the bore compared to the old.  Had to do minimal rear sight adjustment to get on target.




Check back soon.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

HW50S Rebuild, Part 1

Yes I’ve been AWOL for a while, but life gets busy (kids, two businesses, several other hobbies) and I haven’t had much luck finding odd/rare and cheap airguns to work on lately. We’ve covered almost all of the common airguns and both Derrick and my airgun want lists consist mostly of unobtainable or expensive rarities.
Derrick managed to find me a suitably inexpensive and rough HW50S .177 caliber spring piston rifle at the Findlay airgun show. He thinks I need more German springers in my life and I agree.
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Derrick shipped me the rifle, some extra seals and an extra mainspring.
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The slot of the cocking lever is chewed up. I lost the pic, but the buttpad is loose and there's a big wallowed out hole for a rear sling screw that needs fixing as well.

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Rust pitting that was improved by horrific scraping by the previous owner.
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Thankfully the worst of it will be hidden by the stock.
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Just minor pitting, freckles and dings on the top of the tube.
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The barrel has a patina. An uneven patina.
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It’s a Beeman import.
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I always like German rifles.
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The Rekord trigger unit.
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Spares and the trigger guard.
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Put it in the spring compressor.
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Unscrewing…
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There was no tension on it at all.
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That spring looks somewhat canted…
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I don’t like the look of the welds but they seem original.
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This one is slightly better.
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Yes, the spring is that canted.
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Derrick had sent a synthetic seal that mounted via dovetail, but clearly this is an older gun. I like leather seals and will probably keep it original.
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The seal is in good shape.
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Some more pitting and scratches.
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The pivot bolt.
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I love the nut. The “lock washer” seems to have been scavenged from a coil spring. That will probably get replaced as I don’t think it’s original.
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The new spring Derrick sent is longer.
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It does have two more coils so I’m unsure if it will fit, but I’ll try it as is. We’ll see.
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I formed a piece of aluminum around the tube, I’ll use this as a sanding block as I slowly sand all (most) of the pits out. It won’t be fun and will probably take a long while. I’ll then use a cold blue (probably Oxpho blue, limited testing on the gun showed it worked better than the Van’s blue, for this particular gun).