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The Range
Firearms Chat
Anybody have one of these?
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<blockquote data-quote="mr ed" data-source="post: 3545499" data-attributes="member: 6777"><p>take the latch , stick the end under the action bar and snap into place. then put in trigger assembly pin to align latch.</p><p>place on solid surface while holding latch. you can use something as simple as a 16 penny nail for a punch and give it a whack.</p><p>all its for is to hold in place while assembling/ disassembling. once the guard and pins are in place it doesn't really matter, they hold it in.</p><p>if you want to make the Remington tool take a 6 inch piece of 1/2 inch square stock. heat and bend 3/4 of a inch to an "L" then drill and tap a hole in the L and screw in a bolt you have sharpened to a point that sticks out about a quarter of an inch.</p><p>stick the sharp point into the staking area and hit the end you have in your hand. I hardly ever used that tool.</p><p>I had a pair of 1911 plunger tube staking pliers and just used them and a piece of leather to not scratch the finish.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mr ed, post: 3545499, member: 6777"] take the latch , stick the end under the action bar and snap into place. then put in trigger assembly pin to align latch. place on solid surface while holding latch. you can use something as simple as a 16 penny nail for a punch and give it a whack. all its for is to hold in place while assembling/ disassembling. once the guard and pins are in place it doesn't really matter, they hold it in. if you want to make the Remington tool take a 6 inch piece of 1/2 inch square stock. heat and bend 3/4 of a inch to an "L" then drill and tap a hole in the L and screw in a bolt you have sharpened to a point that sticks out about a quarter of an inch. stick the sharp point into the staking area and hit the end you have in your hand. I hardly ever used that tool. I had a pair of 1911 plunger tube staking pliers and just used them and a piece of leather to not scratch the finish. [/QUOTE]
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