I wanted to start a new thread as this is not exactly about the sight pusher, but about installation/removal in general. I'm looking for any/all ideas on fixed sight removal and installation. I watch the boards and have done a couple, but it is invariably the most frustrating part of dealing with the guns. I have gotten frustrated enough to send one or two off, both S&W autos, and have beat the heck out of one or two of my own. So far, this is what I have:
Pad slide and sight with tape. I've used masking tape and duct tape, seemed to help. A little. I have a cold blue pen too, though. Note that M&Ps have stainless slides, be careful.
Good padded vise: I've used leather and tape, neither is great. I'll probably order the hard-rubber padded set from Brownells next but I'm going to try sheets of .090 or .060 Kydex heated and bent to shape so they'll stay in place.
Pre-soak with Kroil, Liquid Wrench, WD-40. Tried LW on one sight, but the way this one is in is not a fair test. I'm skeptical on these, but they can't hurt.
Brass punches filed to lay flat on the dovetail. Seem to help things but don't match the angle of certain sights, still bends on Smith sights. Got an aluminum one made from an old shotgun cleaning rod, don't think it will be much better.
Bronze punch. Never seen one.
German silver punch. I had one of these included with a Dawson FO I put on a 1911. Emphasis on had, got to find another one. Dawson's was pre-shaped to use on the sight I ordered. Have no idea if they beat brass.
I'm going to measure the size of sights compared to any I get off and try to match the size (by the usual taking off of metal on the bottom) and see if that lets me match it faster and maybe speeds fitting the new sight. I have polished the underside of a sight to a mirror polish to get it in when it was close. Also made a very slight bevel on the lead in side of the sight's dovetail. No, it never came out.
Some say to heat the slide. Some say to freeze the slide, both I guess with the idea that the slide and sight are of different material so there will be a dimensional change that will allow movement more easily. Haven't tried that.
Talked to a guy a factory armorer/instructor that has some sort of rig made from an arbor press, but he said he only uses it knowing he can get the slide refinished easily. I don't know what kind of jig he has made to fit the slide or sight.
I'm pretty sure the $500 Hesco sight pusher in the Brownell's catalog is out of range for most folks, and I have not heard glowing reports on the PI500 on the tough guns.
Pretty much all boils down to big hammer, big vise, bent punches, and cold blue or any variation thereof, with an MGW/Smith sight pusher offering some very limited help.
If anyone else got any ideas, I'd love to hear them.
Pad slide and sight with tape. I've used masking tape and duct tape, seemed to help. A little. I have a cold blue pen too, though. Note that M&Ps have stainless slides, be careful.
Good padded vise: I've used leather and tape, neither is great. I'll probably order the hard-rubber padded set from Brownells next but I'm going to try sheets of .090 or .060 Kydex heated and bent to shape so they'll stay in place.
Pre-soak with Kroil, Liquid Wrench, WD-40. Tried LW on one sight, but the way this one is in is not a fair test. I'm skeptical on these, but they can't hurt.
Brass punches filed to lay flat on the dovetail. Seem to help things but don't match the angle of certain sights, still bends on Smith sights. Got an aluminum one made from an old shotgun cleaning rod, don't think it will be much better.
Bronze punch. Never seen one.
German silver punch. I had one of these included with a Dawson FO I put on a 1911. Emphasis on had, got to find another one. Dawson's was pre-shaped to use on the sight I ordered. Have no idea if they beat brass.
I'm going to measure the size of sights compared to any I get off and try to match the size (by the usual taking off of metal on the bottom) and see if that lets me match it faster and maybe speeds fitting the new sight. I have polished the underside of a sight to a mirror polish to get it in when it was close. Also made a very slight bevel on the lead in side of the sight's dovetail. No, it never came out.
Some say to heat the slide. Some say to freeze the slide, both I guess with the idea that the slide and sight are of different material so there will be a dimensional change that will allow movement more easily. Haven't tried that.
Talked to a guy a factory armorer/instructor that has some sort of rig made from an arbor press, but he said he only uses it knowing he can get the slide refinished easily. I don't know what kind of jig he has made to fit the slide or sight.
I'm pretty sure the $500 Hesco sight pusher in the Brownell's catalog is out of range for most folks, and I have not heard glowing reports on the PI500 on the tough guns.
Pretty much all boils down to big hammer, big vise, bent punches, and cold blue or any variation thereof, with an MGW/Smith sight pusher offering some very limited help.
If anyone else got any ideas, I'd love to hear them.
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