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April 5th, 2008, 11:43 | #1 |
King Arms Metal Body- AK-47
I got a King Arms Metal body for my AK-47... Some of the screws aren't fitting properly, and I actually broke a screw while trying to screw some things in... is there any way to make the screws fit properly? And is this the way new metal bodies behave?
I dunno, I kinda want it fixed cause the metal body looks just awesome |
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April 5th, 2008, 14:08 | #2 |
You need to be a little more specific. Saying that its not fitting properly is very general.
Are the holes not lining up? are the screws snapping or stripping? What screws are not going in? Are they the trigger guard ones or the ones that hold the front end in place? Pictures would help us help you as well. |
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April 5th, 2008, 14:18 | #3 |
It sounds like a common problem, that the front end isn't all the way to the back. Which causes the screw holes on the hop-up unit to not line up with the metal body holes, causing the screws to go in crooked. If the front end is correctly in place, the screws should fit in just fine.
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April 5th, 2008, 19:13 | #4 |
The holes DO line up properly, and the screws do go in straight, but about halfway down they start getting more and more difficult to screw in
And yes, it is the alignment of the frontset to the body |
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April 5th, 2008, 19:20 | #5 |
Did you strip the threads or the head of the screw?
Can you put the screws into the front end when it is out side of the body? |
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April 6th, 2008, 00:10 | #6 |
Yeah you can, and breaking teh screw, I stripped the head of the screw... I'm hoping I can get it out cause I want to modify my gun in the near future
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April 6th, 2008, 03:13 | #7 |
Lee Valley tools sells a pair of pliers made specifically for removing bolts/screws where the heads have been stripped (assuming that there is enough of the fastener projecting that one can grab it).
Some bolts are easy to cross thread... if I'm working with one that wants to do that, I find that turning it about half a turn or so backwards in the hole before I start to insert it sorts things out. Worst case scenario, you may have to clean out the threads with an appropriate sized tap. If you haven't done this sort of thing before, I'd recommend practicing on something disposable... ;-) Louis |
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April 6th, 2008, 19:28 | #8 | |
Quote:
You should probably take this to someone who knows what they're doing. For that screw to have stripped you either tried to continue tightening it after the driver started to slip, as Phillips head screws are designed to slip when over torqued, or you are using the wrong size driver for that screw. These are just the rudimentary basics of using a screwdriver. Save yourself the headache and the worry of ruining your parts and pay someone who knows what they are doing to put it together for you. The screw can be removed with care and a pair of vice-grips. It will need replacing. Hopefully you did not damage the threads in the front-end. |
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