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Thread: Stripping my s/h 0.22 Remington Express Compact

  1. #61
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr.Fixit-Norm View Post
    That’s interesting evert, I wonder if there’s an optimum seal resistance ? If when I’ve got it apart I could push the piston back to its ‘at rest’ position, remove the spring, find a steel tube that fits over the piston rod then fit a plate to the top on which I could place weights. Weighing the tube and plate I can then mount the cylinder vertically in a clamp and start adding weights til the piston moves.

    Might be an interesting experiment
    That experiment will give some useful insight. It would be interesting to se how power changes with different seal resistance.
    I'd guess that there's different "best" seal resistance for different types of seals and guns. Some seals have thin sealing lips that expand when pessurized, this probably causes a lot of friction that you cant detect with the sliding test.
    I prefer to try different seals from different makers before sizing.
    You can often find one that fits and does what you want without removing any material if you have several to choose from.
    But that big box of seals costs a bit of money.....
    Too many airguns!

  2. #62
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    Yes it would be quite expensive to experiment with seals from different sources ! The new one I bought was from the Chambers air gun spares site and was listed as 28.6mm, and is identical in size, colour, price and part number to the Diana 34 seal !

    Maybe a Diana 34 seal from a different manufacturer would be worth a go ?

    The thing is the cylinder measures 28.0mm maximum and I was wondering if 28.6mm is too big to even wear in ?

    I sized it down to approx 28.4mm thinking this would be safe ( the old one that came out was 28.2mm.), but are there any guns with a seal at 28.2 or 28.4 as std ?

    Something else I was wondering, both the HW35k I recently worked on and the Remington have similar internal setups and both have springs with top hats and rear spring guide, both have slip washers and new piston seals and are lubed with ‘bumslide’

    The Remington has absolutely no twang whatsoever and if you didn’t see it shoot but heard it, you’d think it was a precharged gun or gas ram
    The 35 on the other hand still has a slight but noticeable twang ? The only thing I could think of that could be making a difference is that the Remy has an external metal spring guide between the spring and the inside of the piston, could this be creating additional twang dampening ?

    Norm.

  3. #63
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr.Fixit-Norm View Post
    the Remy has an external metal spring guide between the spring and the inside of the piston, could this be creating additional twang dampening ?

    Norm.
    yes, which is why lots of us fit them
    Always looking for any cheap, interesting, knackered "project" guns. Thanks, JB.

  4. #64
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    Quote Originally Posted by Shed tuner View Post
    yes, which is why lots of us fit them
    Ahh right, so I was on the right track then , do you have any info on material to use and any measurements ? I’d be quite interested in making and fitting one

    Also any snags and pitfalls to avoid would be good as well

    Cheers,

    Norm

  5. #65
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    Quote Originally Posted by Shed tuner View Post
    yes, which is why lots of us fit them
    Yes, spring sleeves can be helpful to reduce vibration.... but as I have ranted about earlier, well fitted internal guides may be better, as they isolate the spring better from the piston.
    Why add thrust washers to isolate spring rotation from the gun, and then create contact between the sides of the spring and the piston???
    Too many airguns!

  6. #66
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr.Fixit-Norm View Post
    Ahh right, so I was on the right track then , do you have any info on material to use and any measurements ? I’d be quite interested in making and fitting one

    Also any snags and pitfalls to avoid would be good as well

    Cheers,

    Norm
    A wide choice of materials, Norm.. The "connoisseur's choice" would, most likely, be shim steel. But many successful and effective sleeves come from PTFE sheet (usually 0.5mm), plastic bottles, beer and soft drinks cans (mostly aluminium these days) and a few steel ones. Pretty sure Jon has advocated WD40 cans before, as they're steel and, therefore, harder wearing. Don't have them fitting too tightly and bear in mind that the spring's diameter will increase slightly when compressed. Some generous castellations to keep in place and a nice thrust washer to protect the sleeve and give a bearing surface.
    THE BOINGER BASH AT QUIGLEY HOLLOW. MAKING GREAT MEMORIES SINCE 15th JUNE, 2013.
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  7. #67
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    Quote Originally Posted by Shed tuner View Post
    yes, which is why lots of us fit them
    I meant to ask this as well the other day, do you make them a complete cylinder or do you have to leave the bit clear where the cocking slot is ?

    Cheers,

    Norm

  8. #68
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr.Fixit-Norm View Post
    I meant to ask this as well the other day, do you make them a complete cylinder or do you have to leave the bit clear where the cocking slot is ?

    Cheers,

    Norm
    complete, with the join on the opposite side to the cocking slot. a small gap at the join is fine - an over-lap is not.
    The cocking shoe shoudl ride on the cocking slot, and not dig into the sleeve. If it does, smooth the cocking shoe, as it would be gouging into the spring too.. then fit a new sleeve

    Have you made that 15 g steel TH yet ?
    Always looking for any cheap, interesting, knackered "project" guns. Thanks, JB.

  9. #69
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    Quote Originally Posted by Shed tuner View Post
    complete, with the join on the opposite side to the cocking slot. a small gap at the join is fine - an over-lap is not.
    The cocking shoe shoudl ride on the cocking slot, and not dig into the sleeve. If it does, smooth the cocking shoe, as it would be gouging into the spring too.. then fit a new sleeve

    Have you made that 15 g steel TH yet ?
    Thanks for the info, I did wonder if it could be a complete cylinder as I’m sure I’d seen pics of homemade ones that had a slot that matched the cocking one ?
    It’ll be a lot stronger as a complete cylinder. I was wondering about joining it, I did think about using tin and once rolled to the right dimension, make a butt joint with say a 0.5mm gap and solder it then carefully file it back ?

    I did find a specialist company that made very thin walled stainless tube ( 0.5mm wall thickness ) any size in 0.5mm increments up to 35mm, I was going to ring them next week with a plausible story and see if I could get a 100mm long ‘sample’

    I did make the steel top hat after a load of hassle with my lathe It’s a 1945 Myford 3 1/2 M series and it’s been playing up. It didn’t matter how sharp or how I set up the tools/ speed, it would start to chatter really badly when cutting, even if just a fine cut. The problem was two fold, the headstock bearings needed adjustment and it was only obvious when I loosened the belt drive and found about 0.5mm of up down movement at the Chuck

    My mate Tony found an original Drummond manual pdf online which covered the bearing adjustment ( they’re tapered phosphor bronze ones and tighten up facing away from each other ! )

    Having done that ( 3 times ) it was still chattering a bit and I think it’s because the 5” Chronos Chuck I bought to replace the worn original, is really too far away from the bearing. If I fit the low profile Crown 4 jaw Chuck ( which has its own issues ) it doesn’t chatter at all but this Chuck has damaged scroll screws - try finding a set of them on the net, it’s a bit like trying to find hens teeth buried in rocking horse poo somewhere in a large haystack

    Anyway, I got it good enough to make a top hat but due to the size constants it only weights 10g

    I’m going to fit it tomorrow and see what happens, I’ll also strip the HW35 and measure it up for a piston guide

    Phew,

    Norm

  10. #70
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    cool, even 10g will help. if you can add a steel washer/disc weight so much the better, but try just the TH first.

    Don't over think the piston sleeve - just a rolled up tube (beer can, wd40 can, plastic bottle, ptfe sheet, whatever) stuffed in there will work perfectly for years. Spend the time you save adjusting your headstock bearings
    Always looking for any cheap, interesting, knackered "project" guns. Thanks, JB.

  11. #71
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    I've just bought a standard Express to have a tinker with.
    I'm following this thread with interest and hopefully the gun will be sweet when finished.
    I'll then pass it on to Emma's boyfriend, George, who will then have a gun of his own to enjoy the hobby with.
    Hopefully, he will then be as hooked as Emma and me.

  12. #72
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr.Fixit-Norm View Post
    That’s interesting evert, I wonder if there’s an optimum seal resistance ? If when I’ve got it apart I could push the piston back to its ‘at rest’ position, remove the spring, find a steel tube that fits over the piston rod then fit a plate to the top on which I could place weights. Weighing the tube and plate I can then mount the cylinder vertically in a clamp and start adding weights til the piston moves.

    Might be an interesting experiment
    Quote Originally Posted by evert View Post
    That experiment will give some useful insight. It would be interesting to se how power changes with different seal resistance.
    I'd guess that there's different "best" seal resistance for different types of seals and guns. Some seals have thin sealing lips that expand when pessurized, this probably causes a lot of friction that you cant detect with the sliding test.
    I prefer to try different seals from different makers before sizing.
    You can often find one that fits and does what you want without removing any material if you have several to choose from.
    But that big box of seals costs a bit of money.....
    That would, most definitely, be a most interesting investigation, chaps. As evert says, I think there would be different optimal resistance with different types of seal. Generally, we've just gone by "feel" previously.
    THE BOINGER BASH AT QUIGLEY HOLLOW. MAKING GREAT MEMORIES SINCE 15th JUNE, 2013.
    NEXT EVENT :- May 4/5, 2024.........BOING!!

  13. #73
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    Quote Originally Posted by Shed tuner View Post
    cool, even 10g will help. if you can add a steel washer/disc weight so much the better, but try just the TH first.

    Don't over think the piston sleeve - just a rolled up tube (beer can, wd40 can, plastic bottle, ptfe sheet, whatever) stuffed in there will work perfectly for years. Spend the time you save adjusting your headstock bearings
    Yip.
    THE BOINGER BASH AT QUIGLEY HOLLOW. MAKING GREAT MEMORIES SINCE 15th JUNE, 2013.
    NEXT EVENT :- May 4/5, 2024.........BOING!!

  14. #74
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    Quote Originally Posted by gtfreight View Post
    I've just bought a standard Express to have a tinker with.
    I'm following this thread with interest and hopefully the gun will be sweet when finished.
    I'll then pass it on to Emma's boyfriend, George, who will then have a gun of his own to enjoy the hobby with.
    Hopefully, he will then be as hooked as Emma and me.
    Excellent. Enjoy the project, Gary. I'm sure it will go well and the resulting rifle warmly welcomed by George.
    THE BOINGER BASH AT QUIGLEY HOLLOW. MAKING GREAT MEMORIES SINCE 15th JUNE, 2013.
    NEXT EVENT :- May 4/5, 2024.........BOING!!

  15. #75
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    Quote Originally Posted by Shed tuner View Post
    cool, even 10g will help. if you can add a steel washer/disc weight so much the better, but try just the TH first.

    Don't over think the piston sleeve - just a rolled up tube (beer can, wd40 can, plastic bottle, ptfe sheet, whatever) stuffed in there will work perfectly for years. Spend the time you save adjusting your headstock bearings
    I fitted the top hat today and in doing so found when stripping the action that the spring seemed really tight in the external metal sprIng guide !

    Initially I thought that the spring was bent but having examined both it and the guide I found two issues. Firstly the spring did indeed have a very slight bend in it, just over 1/2 way along from the piston end. When I put a straight edge along it and slowly turned it there was a point where the ends were about 1mm away from the straight edge. I corrected this by very carefully bending it back

    Then I found a more serious issue, actually caused by me and this is something that may prevent another Remy stripper from getting the same issue !

    It turns out that when I was putting the barrel back on, I left the cocking link in one piece meaning that to get the hole lined up for the barrel axis pin I was putting the cocking linkages shoe in at an angle, pushing the breech against the locking ball and then the cocking link would go from angled to snapping into an inline position.

    What this was doing was pushing the end of the cocking shoe, which was quite square ended, into the thin piston liner and putting a thin line dent in it near the end !, three in fact . This was causing the spring to snag on the liner.

    In the end the only way I could sort it was to very carefully file the indents as flat as I dare with a fine half round file. This worked and with a straightened spring it then slid nicely in and out - phew !

    I also smoothed the end of the cocking shoe slightly as well.

    When putting it all back together I split the cocking arm where the pin with circlips goes through and was then able to assemble the action without damaging the piston sleeve. I then ran 27 ( I know I lost count ) FAP pellets over the chrono and this was the result.

    Ave. 580ft/ sec (10.0ftlbs), range 575 - 588ft/sec ( only one pellet at 588 so in reality 575 - 586 or 11ft / sec spread !! )

    It’s up on previous results ( ave 9.7ftlbs ) but the piston is still quite tight in the cylinder, I’m hoping with use it’ll ease a bit, which will probably put the power up a bit more.

    All in all a good afternoons work

    Norm

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