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Old 09-10-2019, 09:02 PM
Kurt505 Kurt505 is offline
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Default Front sight removal

I’m refinishing an old model 70 push feed and would like to remove the front sight, I’m just worried if I get it hot enough to melt the solder that I might inadvertently warp or bend the barrel. Does anyone have any insight into this, and I better off to just leave it? When my scope is at low power I can see the the front sight, little bothersome.
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Old 09-10-2019, 09:23 PM
heybert heybert is offline
 
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I watched an old gunsmith take off the front sight of a Model 70 (1975). Barrel never changed colour.
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Old 09-10-2019, 10:26 PM
Kurt505 Kurt505 is offline
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Originally Posted by heybert View Post
I watched an old gunsmith take off the front sight of a Model 70 (1975). Barrel never changed colour.
Did he tap on it? I was thinking of putting it upside down and heating the sight up until it fell off.
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Old 09-11-2019, 12:20 AM
heybert heybert is offline
 
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Yes he did. From what I can remember, it was a small plastic mallet.
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Old 09-11-2019, 04:51 AM
270person 270person is offline
 
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If you're worried about doing some damage why not just take it into Edmonton's old gunsmith, Henrickson, and let him do it. Shouldn't take long.

Always good to have someone else to blame in times of catastrophic failure. "Hey...you warped my barrel...make me a new one."
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Old 09-11-2019, 06:45 AM
Kurt505 Kurt505 is offline
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Originally Posted by 270person View Post
If you're worried about doing some damage why not just take it into Edmonton's old gunsmith, Henrickson, and let him do it. Shouldn't take long.

Always good to have someone else to blame in times of catastrophic failure. "Hey...you warped my barrel...make me a new one."
Lol, it’s like my buddy says “I drive a Ford because I like the challenge”. I like to learn how to do things, and this is just a project rifle so in case of catistrophic failure I’m not going to be out my go to Hunting rig. I still would like to do it correctly though.
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Old 09-11-2019, 08:11 AM
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kritz kritz is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 270person View Post
If you're worried about doing some damage why not just take it into Edmonton's old gunsmith, Henrickson, and let him do it. Shouldn't take long.

Always good to have someone else to blame in times of catastrophic failure. "Hey...you warped my barrel...make me a new one."
Or take it to this guy who has done 1000's of them over the years. Probably wont cost much other than the few minutes to go visit and learn a few things.
When dealing with some parts of your firearm there is no "oops that didn't work", it may end catastrophic before you ever knew what happened. when dealing with heat and tapping the end of a barrel when you are unsure.
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