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Hammer gun mainspring pin repair
Unread 01-09-2011, 01:26 PM   #1
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Richard Flanders
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Default Hammer gun mainspring pin repair

I'm posting these again for a member who expressed and interest in seeing them. I repaired a broken mainspring pin on a hammer gun a few years back and I doubt it will ever fail again. Others may be interested in this sort of repair. It wasn't that difficult really. It just took some attention to detail. If I handed someone the spring today they would not know it was repaired unless I told them.
Attached Images
File Type: jpg Turning pin mail.jpg (75.3 KB, 2 views)
File Type: jpg polishing pin down mail.jpg (51.1 KB, 62 views)
File Type: jpg Ready for pressing in pin mail.jpg (58.8 KB, 62 views)
File Type: jpg Final product mail.jpg (38.1 KB, 62 views)
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Unread 01-09-2011, 01:33 PM   #2
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Jerry Andrews
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Well aren't you just crafty! Very very intelligent repair! Thanks for sharing, that's one snappy repair! Jerry
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Unread 01-09-2011, 01:54 PM   #3
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I had to think of something. I searched long and hard for a replacement spring. They're out there but no one will part with one. I made the pin a tight press fit but not tight enough to bulge the spring wall. One option I toyed with was drilling it all the way through, chamfering the backside of the hole just a touch and peening the shank of the pin into the chamfer and filing it off level so that the pin would be riveted in so to speak and could never back out under any circumstances. I chose to pin it long enough to hopefully hold forever and leave as much original spring metal as possible to preserve the spring. If it ever loosens I can remove it and go the drill through option, but I don't foresee that ever happening. I've shot it a lot since then and it's just fine. I can't imagine that there are not a lot of old mainsprings out there that need this exact repair. All it takes is an old hard bolt, a grade 8 Cat or an aircraft bolt from the scrap bucket like I used, and a lathe with a nice sharp bit and a cobalt drill bit of the right size and you're in business... The size of the drill bit determines what diameter you turn the pin shank to. It's not rocket science... try it sometime. I'm sure I could turn that pin entirely on a drill press with a set of files if I absolutely had to. We're only limited by our imagination on projects like this.
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