I've never used one like this style, but is putting that much torque (the 30-50 lbs different barrel nuts require) on the takedown pin holes of the upper a problem?
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If you are installing barrels on an AR, you should already have an armorer's wrench for the barrel nut. This is what you want for the barrel itself, engages the locking lugs of the barrel, no torque on the upper receiver. Good unit.
https://www.brownells.com/gunsmith-...l-sku080000637-27452-53686.aspx?sku=080000637
Never had a problem with mine, many barrels done. Kinda have to wonder about shearing away a steel indexing pin with the aluminum that captures the pin.
I dont, not when I hear one of the top precision AR companies out there has seen problems with them. Perhaps you should share your credentials since you are calling out theirs. Every time I have seen a thread with a sheared index pin I wondered how they did it. A sheared cam pin or sheered index pin are the only two ways I can think of an AR can fire out of battery.
WTF gives your short sighted self the idea that I called out their credentials. According to you, the world should stop using reaction rods because they either had or are aware of problems with indexing pins being sheared. Tell me the facts about the incidents where somebody sheared a pin. 80-90 lbs. torque maybe, tried to torque without torquing then loosening, then torquing and loosening...
All I stated was the fact that I have had NO problems whatsoever using a reaction rod! If you choose not to use one, you are certainly welcome not to, but you sure as hell are not the be all, end all in the AR world!
Once upon a time somebody said the world was flat...
Never had a problem with mine, many barrels done. Kinda have to wonder about shearing away a steel indexing pin with the aluminum that captures the pin.
dude never called anyone out....calm downI dont, not when I hear one of the top precision AR companies out there has seen problems with them. Perhaps you should share your credentials since you are calling out theirs. Every time I have seen a thread with a sheared index pin I wondered how they did it. A sheared cam pin or sheered index pin are the only two ways I can think of an AR can fire out of battery.
dude never called anyone out....calm down
also, them being a top company doesnt preclude them from the potential of fucking shit up like the rest of us.
frankly ive not heard of anyone having this issue.....im sure they did manage to break a couple....if youre doing hundreds of guns a day, chances are you are going to run into weird issues that most of us wont see...however if it were a wide spread issue im sure it would be plastered everywhere by now.
I use a clamshell block to install barrel nut. It can put some marring on your upper so if it matters, some sort of tape on the receiver sides to prevent marring. I like how it braces off the entire receiver without putting stress on specific areas.
For timing muzzle devices or anything else I run with a reaction rod, although I stopped using crush washers a while back and just use timing shims for muzzle devices.
Please critique my method for AR barrel installs, I am not a gunsmith although do my own barrel installs on bolt action of my own starting with a blank, not a savage style install. I put the AR barrel in a barrel vise and then tighten the barrel nut using a standard armorers wrench. Having the barrel in the vise reduces any torque applied to just that supported by the shear force on the barrel indexing pin.
I find the argument that one method will tend to shear the indexing pin as strange because if you apply the same torque to the armorers wrench the shear forces on the pin will be equal as that is the only component on the barrel that is keeping the barrel from rotating with respect to the upper receiver. Please prove me wrong on my argument about the shear force, when I do the engineering statics analysis on the torques and forces involved I find no difference in the shear forces on the indexing pin.
Thanks
wade