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Hi Unregistered,
On July 29th, this site will be moving..! No, really - it's "moving" to another physical location - including servers, gateways, routers - everything - including my coffee cup...
So, from the date of July 29th through July 30 or 31 (shooting for these dates, but - as always, I'm at the mercy of my ISP who has to install the lines to the new location - and we actually get them running ;) ). But - this site, cloud servers and main web will be OFF LINE.
Now, please save these dates!! Please - don't be "that guy" who emails me on the 30th to tell me you "can't open the Parker Website". I'll already know it is offline - and also know that you are "that guy"...
I'll take this notice up and down over the next week or so - and leave it up during the final few days before shutting it off on the 29th..
John D.
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Gun lube |
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01-12-2017, 07:54 PM
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#1
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Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 155
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Gun lube
How often should you take off the trigger plate and lube the cocking slide, sear and hammer slot etc.? I shoot my GHE about 200 shells per week. I grease the hinge pin, forearm to receiver and locking lug after each day out. Any help would be appreciated. Carvel
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01-13-2017, 10:45 AM
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#2
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Join Date: Jun 2009
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Unless you encounter a problem, I wouldn't remove the trigger plate very often at all (once a year is probably too frequent). Messing with it gives rise to a host of ills (buggered screws, damaged front lip of the plate, uneven replacement along the milled rim, etc.). Also, over-lubricating the interior workings dramatically increases the accumulation of dust, dirt, grime & etc. Once heavy oil or grease traps these particles, you essentially have the equivalent of a grinding compound working on the bearing surfaces. A VERY light (one or 2 drops) application of fine gun oil is all that is needed. The other end of this spectrum is the VH that a man brought to our table at the first Greenwich show and actually asked us to disassemble the action because it was so hard to cock and fire that he'd quit using it (think 'grandpop's old duck gun). When we took the trigger plate off it looked like someone had used a straightedge to screed heavy wheel bearing grease into the interior - you couldn't make out the individual parts at all. The action was completely clogged with gunk the consistency of pudding. The worst of all is squirting oil, WD40, GunScrubber, G96 or some other spray into the firing pin holes; this goes directly on and into the stock head.
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