Just cut the extension tongue off the latest factory catches, pretty it up with a file and sandpaper, and you have a flush mag release. End of problem! Tight magazines need dressing a little on the...
Type: Posts; User: gundoc
Just cut the extension tongue off the latest factory catches, pretty it up with a file and sandpaper, and you have a flush mag release. End of problem! Tight magazines need dressing a little on the...
For a cheap rifle (the main reason so many have been sold) the Marlins are OK but far from trouble-free. Their most common problem is misfiring after they are a couple of years old. The design is...
I do not know you and intend no personal disrespect. I was simply pointing out that it is not neccesary to spend a large amount of money on aftermarket parts for the 10/22 when the same result (ie;...
No, never bothered with bedding unless a customer specifically asked for it. I found the standard front action screw was perfectly adequate for good accuracy, and the barrel was sufficiently stiff...
I probably averaged 5 a week for more than 40 years. Sometimes I did them in case lots for retailers. I also made a good number of fully suppressed bolt-action .22's (mostly JW15's) that my...
I put the barrel in the lathe and run a light knurl on the barrel shank to increase the diameter to a firm push fit, smear retaining grade Loctite on the shank and press in place (taking care to get...
The weight of the bolt and the strength of the return spring combined is too much for the low recoiling subs to push the bolt back far enough to reliably eject the fired case, and feed a new round. ...
After 50 years of tuning 10/22's (I did my first one in 1966) I can tell you that they are accurate and reliable rifles, head and shoulders above any other semi-auto on the market. There have been...