yugowego
Member
I must of lucked out... Mine wasnt on very tight at all... It was about as normal as my ARs.
Nylon brush wasn't enough, but a brass brush and some oil took care of it.The Aluminum marks come off easily with a rough sponge/nylon and brass brushes/terry cloth and some oil.
Couple of follow-up questions:
1. When tightening the T22 handguard converter, and then, the barrel nut wrench, you should be holding the barrel, not the upper, correct? Or is there no risk of damaging the upper by holding it for these tightening tasks?
2. Once a longer handguard is installed, how do you tighten and subsequently loosen (if you needed to) the flash hider? There isn't enough room to get vise jaws on the barrel. I suppose a pair of pliers and some inner tube will let you achieve sufficient torque to keep the FH in place and loosen it in the future. Any other suggestions with respect to this?
Thanks for the detailed explanation.Just to take a little time to explain why you do not hold a 15-22 by the upper to do any of this type of work. On the 15-22 unlike an AR, the barrel is inserted through the upper receiver from the backside, the nut then threads onto the barrel from the front (as normal) but it actually pulls the barrel and sandwiches it between the nut and the upper receiver. Inside the upper receiver there is a steel insert that takes all the squeezing pressure. But the ONLY thing that stops the barrel from turning in the upper are a pair of small ears on the chamber block, these ears engage plastic slots in the upper (the same slots that the bolt rails interface).
If you attempt to tighten things or loosen things using the receiver and not holding the barrel it can and will spin inside the upper. If the rifle is fully assembled when this happens it will also bend the bolt rails. If the rifle is not assembled it will gouge out the plastic that the ears align into.
Hope that helps explain the "why".
My vise blocks are just 2 pieces of pine 2x4, clamped together and a 5/8" hole drilled for the barrel to sit in. A .625" hole seems to have about the right crush on a .670" barrel. Worked great, my flash hider was a tight one. If it's not enough in the future I'll make another set of blocks from hardwood.I had padded the barrel with soft wood but that twisted in my vice... I ended up using hard wood pads in the vice...
Yes, you need an undersize hole so it deforms and gets a really good "bite" on the barrel. The hole is drilled across, not with, the woods grain. I much prefer wood blocks over the aluminum V blocks.I guess the problem I had was that my wood didn't have a slot for the barrel to fit into so the friction between the wood and the barrel was only along a narrow line.