I’m planning to bend the barrel before the scope gets here. YouTube makes it look easy!It looks like a good setup. I see no problems at all. I use the same setup with a different brand rings. It will serve you well.
Don't overtorque the screws on the rail. You will be buying longer ones and putting a nut behind them. Other than that it's all good.
There should be a pin in the rail. That rail will mount with the cantilever forward or back. The pin goes in the dimple on the receiver.
Depending on your ring height and scope configuration it may need to be reversed. Before you tighten anything put it all together with the recoil pin in the hole and get the proper eye relief. Make sure the bell of the scope isn't touching the rail. Get your scope rings as far apart as you can and not close to the erector or objective bell. Get it figured out first. Then put it all together and plumb the crosshairs with the bore.
Then bend the barrel????
And this is why I love this forum.Put your fulcrum point right at that block. Where the barrel meets the breech block. (I think springers have a pivot block)
Put one end of the jig on the breech block. The other end of the jig on the barrel right behind the sight. Set it in the vice. Put a 3/4"-1/2" piece of hardwood on the barrel opposite the jig as a fulcrum. Right at the juncture of the barrel and the block. Squeeze it tight.
Use a straight edge between the front sight and the rear screw on the back of the gun action. Then look at the deflection in your rear sight. You can see exactly how much you need to bend it.
When you can get a straight edge to pass through the front bead, the center of the rear sight, and the screw centered on the rear of the action you are golden. It's all lining up windage wise. Your pattern on paper with the sights set to center should reflect that.
When a gun gets a bent barrel it also knocks the front sight over sometimes. You don't want to straighten a barrel with a crooked front sight.
Level the gun with a plumbers level across the flat on the breech block. Then look at that front sight really close. Make sure its vertical with the bore. Use a plumb line and twist it back in place if its off.
When the front sight is perfectly plumb with the bore and the rear sight is centered you can use a straight edge to see if you made a correction.
Once you figure out how much pressure it takes to get a correction it goes pretty quickly. It takes more time to strip the action and put it back in the stock to test fire than to bend it.
Just go slow and be careful. Don't try to do it all at once. Make sure things are square in the vice. Assemble and reassemble the gun carefully (you might do it 15 times!).
Just to make sure we’re on the same page…is this the PA article you’re referring to?Don't do any of that.
You are only putting pressure on the barrel. From the breech block forward.
Leave everything assembled. Just take it out of the stock.
Watch the video again. Read the PA blog. The back of the jig is against the breech block. Front of the jig up behind the front sight. The fulcrum is in front of the breech block on the barrel. The force is at the fulcrum. Nothing behind the jig is under tension.
Fully understand what is going on before you torque things down. If your not sure ask!
thank you for the photos and information. Saved to my iPhoneHere it is in a vice set up for a bend to the left...
View attachment 490688
View attachment 490689
Dont use a c clamp. It isn't stable. It will take a really big one. It will stretch and your jig will flex. Things will get funky and slip out of the fixture causing damage.
The vice is sweet it keeps things straight and has plenty of force.
Notice the placement of the jig and the fulcrum. It only applies force to the barrel and block. The rest of the action just floats behind.
Hope this helps. It would tickle me to see you bend it back on center. Most guys wouldn't try it. A lot of guys will tell you your nuts to even try. It's something that's a bit of a black art in gunsmithing.
Get it set right and give it a big hug. It will move!
Elevation is the same but be careful of the sight. Your jig might need to have deeper offset. An up or down bend requires you remove the cocking arm. Left or right you don't have to remove anything.
A close up of the jig. It's maple. I cut a concave groove for the barrel to keep it from slipping. The other end has a flat face that sits on the pivot block.
Maple is wicked strong. You could use a steel bar with wood blocks instead. Or make a jig like the blog. But whatever you use it must be strong. You will break or bend a jig that isn't rock solid...
View attachment 490702
Your fulcrum will crush. It takes all the force. Pine won't work. Hardwood. Lead. Anything softer than the barrel that won't scratch.
Good luck!
Yes it will break some scopes, that's why you ask the scope distributor if it's springer rated, and does it have a life time warranty that will replace it if something does go wrong. Some guns will be harder on scopes than others.I have some hi-dollar scopes on firearms, but was always told not to put them on an airgun, but buy an airgun specific scope. I thought the recoil impulse of an airgun, can destroy a standard rifle scope?
Is this true?
That's a slick barrel bending contraption you have, I bet it works like a charm.Here it is in a vice set up for a bend to the left...
View attachment 490688
View attachment 490689
Dont use a c clamp. It isn't stable. It will take a really big one. It will stretch and your jig will flex. Things will get funky and slip out of the fixture causing damage.
The vice is sweet it keeps things straight and has plenty of force.
Notice the placement of the jig and the fulcrum. It only applies force to the barrel and block. The rest of the action just floats behind.
Hope this helps. It would tickle me to see you bend it back on center. Most guys wouldn't try it. A lot of guys will tell you your nuts to even try. It's something that's a bit of a black art in gunsmithing.
Get it set right and give it a big hug. It will move!
Elevation is the same but be careful of the sight. Your jig might need to have deeper offset. An up or down bend requires you remove the cocking arm. Left or right you don't have to remove anything.
A close up of the jig. It's maple. I cut a concave groove for the barrel to keep it from slipping. The other end has a flat face that sits on the pivot block.
Maple is wicked strong. You could use a steel bar with wood blocks instead. Or make a jig like the blog. But whatever you use it must be strong. You will break or bend a jig that isn't rock solid...
View attachment 490702
Your fulcrum will crush. It takes all the force. Pine won't work. Hardwood. Lead. Anything softer than the barrel that won't scratch.
Good luck!
I have some hi-dollar scopes on firearms, but was always told not to put them on an airgun, but buy an airgun specific scope. I thought the recoil impulse of an airgun, can destroy a standard rifle scope?
Is this true?