I'm moving the hole to get it centered. When I was done, the hole was exactly where I wanted it, without breaking the bit or the tap. What most do not understand is just how much variations in the metal of the screw causes the hole to walk. The drill has to be steered. Guys that don't do this work assume that the drill will go straight in, just because it was drilled in a drill press. Gunsmiths that do this kind of one off work know better. Just Sayin...............
No Mark, the Internet gunsmiths know better! They would have done it THIS WAY… but don’t seem to have a successful shop or RUclips channel to refer me to. Hmm. Looks like it 1) worked 2) was time and materials efficient 3) saved the original part as much as possible. 4) could basically be reversed if someone wanted to though not sure why they would. 5) matches the original part as much as possible. NEXT?
When I first tried to drill old iron I was struggling to understand why the hole did not want to get straight, by using a drill press. In old “fibrous” material you need to walk the drill, or use a very short one in a very stiff mounting, what is way harder than steering it by hand. The treads on old German parts are often matching BWS (British Standard Withwort) In real they are often Prussian Inch but that is so close to British Inch that it normally works.
Exactly!! I am a shift millwright mechanic at a large paper mill, and a large part of my day to day is removing broken off machine screws. Steering a drill bit is 100% legit. I am also an FFL/gunsmith (in SC, opposite end of I20 from you) when not at my "real job". Love your work!!
@@andrewluder3477 Want to do a colab video together where we finally get a certain .45 peacemaker back in action? I've had it for a long, long time, now may be a good time....
In the marine biz for over 20 years. Lots and lots of gorrilas in it too. Had to drill out WAY too many bolts rung off by a primate insrtead of finessing them out! In a salt water environment, a little grease, ANYTHING, goes a long way with dissimilar metals. Not to mention the use of grade 5 and higher bolts everywhere! Stainless is too brittle.
As someone who also works with their hands on mechanical objects, it’s refreshing to see others have low dexterity days as well. Thanks for the great videos. Entertaining and informative.
Mark, I don't think you realize how therapeutic your videos are, especially the music. Thanks to you and Bruno for taking the time to make and post these. Cheers
'I don't memorize these numbers I just look em up.' That is the true sign of an expert. One who doesn't burden his mind with figures you can leave for an assistant or search when needed, in short doesn't overcomplicate things.
@@randomidiot8142 he could well have. In this particular instance I was loosely quoting Albert speer on Hitler's ability to remember figures but couldn't utilise them correctly.
Two things to say. First I actually like when you show some of the little obstacles, or problems you have with things that you work on. Shows how to overcome those obstacles without freaking out and destroying things. Second, I love the put this bit away where it belongs. I do similar things when working on stuff all the time. 👍 I find these so relaxing to watch, and I enjoy you instructional method so much. Relaxed, teaching, without making it sound like you're talking to idiots. Heck even when an idiot tried to fix something before you and made a mess you don't become insulting. Thanks for the videos. 😎
"When in doubt, throw it out." A somewhat underappreciated concept in modern tooling. All the more notable to myself because the man who taught me that was one of the most careful with money that I ever knew. He counted how many napkins he used in a week, but when he thought a tool had worn out of specification, he replaced it and sold the old one to someone who didn't need the precision. He made his living with his tools, so spending money on keeping them as good as possible was worth it to him.
If you snap the tap off in the hole, it's not done, you still have EDM at your service. Also, I remember a shop in Great Britain in the 1970s, that made custom taps and dies in English / American sizes, Whitworth, Metric and some other oddball sizes. I had to make replacement grips for the .455 Webley Automatic pistol from English Walnut and I had to have the Whitworth die and tap set made for the 55° thread form. The company made the tools and they were very accurate and well made. In the end you did a very nice job on the screw. The hardest job working on the old German firearms isn't the actual work on the parts; it's explaining how the parts work to the customer!
There are also the BA threads that got lifted from the original Swiss Thury threads (differing only in having rounded tips in the BA form). They were the first metric standard British threads with a 47.5 degree thread angle.
once again nothing but a pleasure to watch you work sir..thank you and bruno for allowing us want to be gunsmiths the privilege of watching a master at work and the opportunity to learn from you...it's such a pleasure to watch someone who takes pride and joy in their work
I relate to the ham hock hands... I was working with fine screws years ago atop a CFM 56 737 engine,,,PRSOV valve.... when a Small screw fell past the taped 6 inch opening that goes directly into the engine core, screw fell between tape bands...all I could hear was ...TINK TINK as it dropped down. Engine went to the shop for 87 Hours of disassembly.... thank God I followed procedure and had a Union. This was at 2 AM on the flight line... Freezing weather.
Better to disassemble than suck that bolt through the engine. Had that happen on a 727 we'd just finished doing a hush mod. ⅜" bolt turned that brand new JT8 into scrap.
I was just geometrically thinking that new screw/plug-stop thing you made for it really should be reverse threaded to theoretically avoid the need for Loctite however structurally speaking it probably wouldn't be worth the hassle considering the tooling you'd need to order for this one-off job. I love how mentally stimulating your videos are, nice job.
I have to tell you something Mark i watch a lot of RUclips creators and for some reason when your videos pop up the first thing I check is how long the video is if it’s long I’m loving it. I don’t know why but I can watch you channel all day love it brother keep them coming
I'm almost seventy and the gravity sucks days and Gumby fingers come a little more frequently, Thank You for sharing that, I am encouraged to hear the challenge is not without companions and compatriots. Your Wisdom and Insight is impeccable.
It's amazingly beautiful and overly engineered. Cool as heck. I know you have the greatest job on the planet. Just look at all of the one of a kind weapons you get to see just how they were built centuries ago and make them run. God bless you and your loved ones Godspeed
Took me a bit to figure out how that barrel band operated. Luckily, I worked it out before the hork occurred. I've actually learned to stop and examine as many times as necessary. Nicely finessed work on the head replacement.
Hey Mark! Thanks for making these videos! I’m enjoying the lessons on gun stock refinishing, checkering on heat treatment and tempering and drawing temper and softening the metal so it can be drilled and worked. I can see that gunsmithing has a lot to offer.
@@jonjames7328 not sure if I should joke about only two thousand or only two thousand 'working' parts. Pretty sure on the molecular level we're more than two thousand parts.
I have low dexterity days all the time. The USN lost a valuable asset when you retired! I think you'd be a gass to work with/for. Way intelligent content, and the nuances in your narrative of the work at hand is both entertaining and informative!
Personally I would have used a drill press. I know how good I am with a hand drill. Love seeing a master craftsman doing his thing! And yes I prefer a dial caliper to the no doubt more accurate digital calipers because the batteries always seem to be dead when I want to use it! My brother's Father-in-law was a machinist and my brother inherited his tools. Not a piece of electronics in the lot!
Buy good calipers. Something like a mittotoyo that actually shuts off will last years longer on a battery than the $15 digital from the hazard fraught.
@@leftyeh6495 Actually my dial calipers are the "good" ones, at least I paid enough money for them several decades ago. They suit my needs well, and I see no need to buy new just for the sake of new. If I was a professional machinist, that would be one thing, but for my use, they are accurate enough!
A suggestion you probably are already aware of on getting that screw piece started from someone who work on very small stuff regulary and has dexterity issues.... first couple of turns are a lot easier with some blue tac. It wont go all the way in, but makes starting them a lot easier.
Hey Mark.... I noticed the couch under the work bench. Is that where you go for a nap and to remember life on a submarine? LOL.... thanks for your service and the great videos. :)
RE: blind hole in the screw, technically, you are weakening it, as the cross section of any material is a factor in strength, however, for the part you are making to fail, one must induce a load that is far in excess of what is needed for the purpose it was intended...AKA, The Stupid would need to be applied.
"As with most things German, this is needlessly complicated. Eurgh." I felt that "eurgh" in the little part of my soul that owns a first-generation Walther CCP.
You should try dealing with their machine tools - ugh. They're a nation of watchmakers, so of course "needlessly complicated" is burnt into them. "A German anvil has 70 moving parts, and has to be wound twice an hour"
My son has the family 71/84 that supposedly came from my grand uncle that died in the Marines of pneumonia in 1913. That barrel band screw on ours is close to being "horked".
I stripped and broke the button head my Finnish mosin 1891 barrel band and that damn band is a rare find and when u do find expensive .the damn thing is opposite of rightie tightie . I was thinking about doing this repair but I'm not too good with tap and dies I'm learning on aluminum. I finally found a replacement. Would be nice to do this repair with a bead wield but as u stated it has to turn I racked my mine on this very repair for a while till I just found the replacement lol.
Mark, hint - get an old pair of surgical tweezers used for threading needle through during surgery, they have locking teeth by the loops and will lock on it nicely. I use for working on electronic locks.
A half-hour of working, grunting, fiddling, solving, cursing and re-working. Final assessment: “Sometimes it’s as simple as drilling a hole down the long axis of a screw.”
The treads on old German parts are often matching BWS (Britisch Standart Withwort) In real they are often Prussian Inch but that is so close to British Inch that it normally works.
That’s ok because Enfield didn’t used the British standard inch either - the ROF Enfield used the Enfield inch - which is 1% longer than the British standard inch and based on the Swiss Geneva inch. And people wonder why the metric system became a thing…
I'm moving the hole to get it centered. When I was done, the hole was exactly where I wanted it, without breaking the bit or the tap. What most do not understand is just how much variations in the metal of the screw causes the hole to walk. The drill has to be steered. Guys that don't do this work assume that the drill will go straight in, just because it was drilled in a drill press. Gunsmiths that do this kind of one off work know better. Just Sayin...............
No Mark, the Internet gunsmiths know better!
They would have done it THIS WAY… but don’t seem to have a successful shop or RUclips channel to refer me to. Hmm.
Looks like it 1) worked 2) was time and materials efficient 3) saved the original part as much as possible. 4) could basically be reversed if someone wanted to though not sure why they would. 5) matches the original part as much as possible. NEXT?
When I first tried to drill old iron I was struggling to understand why the hole did not want to get straight, by using a drill press. In old “fibrous” material you need to walk the drill, or use a very short one in a very stiff mounting, what is way harder than steering it by hand. The treads on old German parts are often matching BWS (British Standard Withwort)
In real they are often Prussian Inch but that is so close to British Inch that it normally works.
Exactly!! I am a shift millwright mechanic at a large paper mill, and a large part of my day to day is removing broken off machine screws. Steering a drill bit is 100% legit. I am also an FFL/gunsmith (in SC, opposite end of I20 from you) when not at my "real job". Love your work!!
@@andrewluder3477 Want to do a colab video together where we finally get a certain .45 peacemaker back in action? I've had it for a long, long time, now may be a good time....
In the marine biz for over 20 years. Lots and lots of gorrilas in it too. Had to drill out WAY too many bolts rung off by a primate insrtead of finessing them out! In a salt water environment, a little grease, ANYTHING, goes a long way with dissimilar metals. Not to mention the use of grade 5 and higher bolts everywhere! Stainless is too brittle.
As someone who also works with their hands on mechanical objects, it’s refreshing to see others have low dexterity days as well. Thanks for the great videos. Entertaining and informative.
Exactly! I know these days all too well. There are days my hands just say "Nope, not today buddy!", and just refuse to do as they're told.
It's like it's your first day with your new fingers.
As a hobby machinist, phlebotomist and avid DnD player, I concur
20 years and I still wrap Teflon tape the wrong way 45% of the time. 😳
Common thing to hear from me when changing inserts on a CNC: *Clatter* FUCK
Mark, I don't think you realize how therapeutic your videos are, especially the music. Thanks to you and Bruno for taking the time to make and post these. Cheers
'I don't memorize these numbers I just look em up.' That is the true sign of an expert. One who doesn't burden his mind with figures you can leave for an assistant or search when needed, in short doesn't overcomplicate things.
Einstein had a similar quote.
@@randomidiot8142 he could well have. In this particular instance I was loosely quoting Albert speer on Hitler's ability to remember figures but couldn't utilise them correctly.
Two things to say. First I actually like when you show some of the little obstacles, or problems you have with things that you work on. Shows how to overcome those obstacles without freaking out and destroying things. Second, I love the put this bit away where it belongs. I do similar things when working on stuff all the time. 👍
I find these so relaxing to watch, and I enjoy you instructional method so much. Relaxed, teaching, without making it sound like you're talking to idiots. Heck even when an idiot tried to fix something before you and made a mess you don't become insulting. Thanks for the videos. 😎
"When in doubt, throw it out." A somewhat underappreciated concept in modern tooling. All the more notable to myself because the man who taught me that was one of the most careful with money that I ever knew. He counted how many napkins he used in a week, but when he thought a tool had worn out of specification, he replaced it and sold the old one to someone who didn't need the precision. He made his living with his tools, so spending money on keeping them as good as possible was worth it to him.
Who doesn't stop using tools or anything else that no longer functions properly??
i have head that if you have a use for a tool tools are cheap
I really don't understand why you don't have more subscribers as you do with your level of artisanship. I recommend you to everyone I know.
Probably because the channel is young. Anvil used to be posted under and as part of C&Rsenal which is also criminally under appreciated
@@sheslikeheroin1661 couldn’t agree more, Sir!
just wanted to say i appreciate you for your willingness to share your knowledge.
If you snap the tap off in the hole, it's not done, you still have EDM at your service. Also, I remember a shop in Great Britain in the 1970s, that made custom taps and dies in English / American sizes, Whitworth, Metric and some other oddball sizes. I had to make replacement grips for the .455 Webley Automatic pistol from English Walnut and I had to have the Whitworth die and tap set made for the 55° thread form. The company made the tools and they were very accurate and well made. In the end you did a very nice job on the screw. The hardest job working on the old German firearms isn't the actual work on the parts; it's explaining how the parts work to the customer!
There are also the BA threads that got lifted from the original Swiss Thury threads (differing only in having rounded tips in the BA form). They were the first metric standard British threads with a 47.5 degree thread angle.
once again nothing but a pleasure to watch you work sir..thank you and bruno for allowing us want to be gunsmiths the privilege of watching a master at work and the opportunity to learn from you...it's such a pleasure to watch someone who takes pride and joy in their work
I'm glad you're uploading the back catalogue, it really goes to show how far you've come/evolved in regards to filming/production.
I relate to the ham hock hands... I was working with fine screws years ago atop a CFM 56 737 engine,,,PRSOV valve.... when a Small screw fell past the taped 6 inch opening that goes directly into the engine core, screw fell between tape bands...all I could hear was ...TINK TINK as it dropped down. Engine went to the shop for 87 Hours of disassembly.... thank God I followed procedure and had a Union. This was at 2 AM on the flight line... Freezing weather.
Better to disassemble than suck that bolt through the engine.
Had that happen on a 727 we'd just finished doing a hush mod. ⅜" bolt turned that brand new JT8 into scrap.
The Man makes drilling a bloody hole interesting!!
Yes indeed!
I've never seen a youtuber with as much attention paid to filming. Love these vids.
I was just geometrically thinking that new screw/plug-stop thing you made for it really should be reverse threaded to theoretically avoid the need for Loctite however structurally speaking it probably wouldn't be worth the hassle considering the tooling you'd need to order for this one-off job.
I love how mentally stimulating your videos are, nice job.
I have to tell you something Mark i watch a lot of RUclips creators and for some reason when your videos pop up the first thing I check is how long the video is if it’s long I’m loving it. I don’t know why but I can watch you channel all day love it brother keep them coming
Brought me back to my childhood with the Sam Hill remark! My grandfather used to say that. He was also a gunsmith by the way.
Bruno is big and strong gunsmith, like Oxen.
Bruno use special force to make gun go bang bang again.
No problems!
Awesome, Mark. It looked like a bit of frustration in the making, but you fixed it right up and didn’t let it stop you. Well done.
I'm almost seventy and the gravity sucks days and Gumby fingers come a little more frequently, Thank You for sharing that, I am encouraged to hear the challenge is not without companions and compatriots. Your Wisdom and Insight is impeccable.
The range of skills you have constantly amaze me. Another cool video.
Mark, watching to you do this repair is so pleasing! Thanks so much for sharing. Just cool to see a master do masterful things.
"Gravity is a downer". Thanks again for your hard work and willingness to show how it should/can be doine.
It's amazingly beautiful and overly engineered.
Cool as heck.
I know you have the greatest job on the planet.
Just look at all of the one of a kind weapons you get to see just how they were built centuries ago and make them run.
God bless you and your loved ones Godspeed
Watching that drill bit bend, high pucker factor.
Grateful that my 71/84 does not suffer from this issue. As always, OUTSTANDING work!
I like your presentation, underscored by your obvious craftsmanship. Bravo, baby!
Just casually has an MP18 and an RSC next to him like it’s any other day
He might not be able to touch his toes but he knows how to flex.
Mark, your content is second to none! Love this! I learn something in every video! Thank you!
Thanks for sharing. Nice to know that even the experts have low dexterity days.
You should release a T-shirt that has your logo on the front and “Gravity Sucks” on the back. I’d wear that.
Yes!
Dude, I find these pieces and your ingenuity fascinating.
As do i
i love watching you make stuff, the screws are my favorite with the heating and beating
Thats awesome, soo complicated yet so simple at the same time...
I’m so glad I’m subscribed to this channel. Quality edutainment as always.
Always appreciate getting to watch the master work.
Man I love watching your show always learn something new and useful 👌thanks
14:47 i have the same block her in Germany...and with the Optivisor...you look like me at work. Well done Mr Novak. Love your style.
I like the whiteboard explanation next to an RSC :)
Mark, always interesting and always informative. Thank you.
Videos like this one are why I feel good about being a Patreon for Mark's work.
I fix stuff for a living. I learn something in every episode. Thanks Mark & Bruno.
Mark, you're such a virtuoso at this! Thanks!
Once again the genius that is you
Thank you
Enjoyed every second of this video.
Took me a bit to figure out how that barrel band operated. Luckily, I worked it out before the hork occurred. I've actually learned to stop and examine as many times as necessary. Nicely finessed work on the head replacement.
Thanks for some great insight Mark.
You are the master. Thank you. Two thumbs
Hey Mark! Thanks for making these videos! I’m enjoying the lessons on gun stock refinishing, checkering on heat treatment and tempering and drawing temper and softening the metal so it can be drilled and worked. I can see that gunsmithing has a lot to offer.
Awesome job my man...learned something today, thanks.
Used to have a German girlfriend, laughed like hell at your observation about making things complicated.
german chicks are so complicated even German engineers fear them.
@@80spodcastchannel human females have over two thousand working parts. Aren’t they just amazing?
@@jonjames7328 But there are only a few parts that i watch.
@@jonjames7328 not sure if I should joke about only two thousand or only two thousand 'working' parts. Pretty sure on the molecular level we're more than two thousand parts.
Thanks for the video Mark and crew. I totally understand the low dexterity days, I have my fair share myself.
Great video Mark. Always enjoy the education and your humor. Look forward to the next episode!
How many guys would have thought to anneal the end of the screw before drilling it? Not me.
It's handy when you're drilling out ar grip screws for a cheaty trigger adjustment screw.
Thank from the Netherlands Mark.
I have low dexterity days all the time. The USN lost a valuable asset when you retired! I think you'd be a gass to work with/for. Way intelligent content, and the nuances in your narrative of the work at hand is both entertaining and informative!
Like. nice to see you "with clients" and work...
Yesterday I had to drill and tap a 1942 Husqvarna receiver for scope mounts, talking about screwing up carbide drill bits!
you could spot anneal fairly easily, a carbon rod out of a lantern battery and a pair of jumper cables works fine
Thank you Mark for another great video, love them keep them coming :-)
Thank you! It is a pleasure and a learning experience that I enjoy
The Germans have a saying:
"Was nicht passt, wird passend gemacht"
"What doesn't fit gets adjusted to (lit. 'made to') fit."
Yes, and they also say " Das Machinen is nicht fur gefingerpoken und mitzengrabben!"
@@TheMicroTrak 😂😂
Personally I would have used a drill press. I know how good I am with a hand drill.
Love seeing a master craftsman doing his thing!
And yes I prefer a dial caliper to the no doubt more accurate digital calipers because the batteries always seem to be dead when I want to use it!
My brother's Father-in-law was a machinist and my brother inherited his tools. Not a piece of electronics in the lot!
Buy good calipers. Something like a mittotoyo that actually shuts off will last years longer on a battery than the $15 digital from the hazard fraught.
@@leftyeh6495
Actually my dial calipers are the "good" ones, at least I paid enough money for them several decades ago. They suit my needs well, and I see no need to buy new just for the sake of new.
If I was a professional machinist, that would be one thing, but for my use, they are accurate enough!
That was amazing!! I feel like I'm now privy to an EYES ONLY secret.
Bravo sir, Bravo.
Man, your videos give me a lot of flashbacks.
Thanks for this nice repair Mark!
Mark say's he has "aggressive wheel". It is great to see a master navigate the rabit hole.
As others might’ve already shared, red Loctite can be overcome by heating the threads a good bit.
A suggestion you probably are already aware of on getting that screw piece started from someone who work on very small stuff regulary and has dexterity issues.... first couple of turns are a lot easier with some blue tac. It wont go all the way in, but makes starting them a lot easier.
I love what looks to be an RSC French WWI semi-auto just casually hanging out in the back of the whiteboard shot.
Hey Mark.... I noticed the couch under the work bench. Is that where you go for a nap and to remember life on a submarine? LOL.... thanks for your service and the great videos. :)
RE: blind hole in the screw, technically, you are weakening it, as the cross section of any material is a factor in strength, however, for the part you are making to fail, one must induce a load that is far in excess of what is needed for the purpose it was intended...AKA, The Stupid would need to be applied.
"As with most things German, this is needlessly complicated. Eurgh." I felt that "eurgh" in the little part of my soul that owns a first-generation Walther CCP.
I get Mark 4 VW Jetta pangs when he says it lol
You should try dealing with their machine tools - ugh.
They're a nation of watchmakers, so of course "needlessly complicated" is burnt into them.
"A German anvil has 70 moving parts, and has to be wound twice an hour"
Great work as always... and I too suffer "low dexterity days" myself.. 😉
I love making repairs like that.
Outstanding bro
Awesome!
Welcome back
This workshop is so cozy
Just pumpin these vids out!
I just want to see and learn more from Mark, I check this site every week hoping for more from this sexy man.
Sometimes the mundane is also some of the most artful in practice.
MARK! You're a beast!
I sure don't want to pay your electric bill.. man, the lighting is fkn brutal in this video.
If whatever you are filming is not emitting smoke from all the light and heat beating down on it, *you need more light.*
My son has the family 71/84 that supposedly came from my grand uncle that died in the Marines of pneumonia in 1913. That barrel band screw on ours is close to being "horked".
P.S. That's the same lathe that I have.
What a royal PITA! But nicely done. Wow.
great work Mark
Can confirm, I’m German and needlessly over complicated.
I stripped and broke the button head my Finnish mosin 1891 barrel band and that damn band is a rare find and when u do find expensive .the damn thing is opposite of rightie tightie . I was thinking about doing this repair but I'm not too good with tap and dies I'm learning on aluminum. I finally found a replacement. Would be nice to do this repair with a bead wield but as u stated it has to turn I racked my mine on this very repair for a while till I just found the replacement lol.
GREAT VIDEO !!!
Dexterity this. If you didn't pinch the snot out of your hand when those needle nose slipped, you're having a good day.
Mark, hint - get an old pair of surgical tweezers used for threading needle through during surgery, they have locking teeth by the loops and will lock on it nicely. I use for working on electronic locks.
Hemostats.....?
Thanks for the video.
Thanks for reminding me to just take a minute and think...
A half-hour of working, grunting, fiddling, solving, cursing and re-working. Final assessment: “Sometimes it’s as simple as drilling a hole down the long axis of a screw.”
Awesome👍
Low dexterity days.... you and me both mark!
Plus one for Lucas Gun Oil. It’s the bee’s knee’s.
The treads on old German parts are often matching BWS (Britisch Standart Withwort)
In real they are often Prussian Inch but that is so close to British Inch that it normally works.
That’s ok because Enfield didn’t used the British standard inch either - the ROF Enfield used the Enfield inch - which is 1% longer than the British standard inch and based on the Swiss Geneva inch. And people wonder why the metric system became a thing…
When Brute Force Fails, Get A Bigger Brute.