Please email me for ordering info. Thanks~OSS
ordnance_solutions@sbcglobal.net

Glad you asked that! I won't be able to buy one, but I've been wondering exactly how one would use this tool.dagobert wrote:OK, so let me see if I understand how this works- this sits into the chamber of the barrel and then the rails (still unattached) are riding on it to confirm their placement in the rewelded receiver body, and then the front end of the barrel is used to confirm alignment of the barrel repair piece in the front shroud. Is that right, or am I missing something? Does this require new never-mounted rails to be fitted, using the existing rivet holes to mark the places to drill the new rails once they are held in alignment? Or are you supposed to fill in the existing rivet holes in the receiver and mark where to drill from the inside of the rails? (That would be... challenging to drill from the inside out) It does look like a useful product, but I'd like to grasp just how it works before buying one.
Sorry; I missed the pictures before the board went down.ordnance_solutions wrote:The instructions for use and a picture that I previously posted after 28 Dec were lost when the board went down, I'll try and get them re-posted soon.
I wasn't expecting it to solve that issue; only to help make it stand out more. As I understand these guns, the receiver body needs to be straight, but what is crucial is that the bolt and barrel need to line up to lock up and release right, the recuperator has to be positioned correctly and the cover needs to engage the pin on top of the bolt in alignment.If you are building a re-weld and have a twisted or warped receiver in the front or back from the welding process this fixture is not going to help you solve that, those are totally different issues involved with building a re-weld.
What I had originally planned on doing was using the existing receiver holes and the holes in the rail to locate the sections of the reweld spacing, then use a unistrut jig to mount it all on so it could be held in place when welding it (and checked for trueness while doing so), after remoing the rails and transfering their hole spacing to a pair of metal flats and brass or copper backing plates. I had thought that this tool might be helpful with checking the alignment of the cam section to the front shroud and rear portion.Also a little common sense will tell you pre exsisting rivet holes in a re-weld receiver and used rails with rivet holes that came from a different gun are not going to line up perfectly to reuse the exsisting rivet holes for installation.
Hey, look, I was just curious if you had come up with some new idea on how it might be done. It's not a question of common sense; it was a question of innovation. I thought maybe you had an idea that hadn't occurred to the rest of us mere mortals- perhaps some method of dimpleing the locations from the inside to show where to drill through with the rails held in place with your product, or some such. I considered it mor challenging than I could solve, but I wasn't going to assume that because I couldn't figure out a way, that no one else could either.And only a tiny bit of common sense does it take to know that no one can drill rivet holes using exsisting holes on the rails from the inside of a receiver, that is beyond challenging.
OK, thanks.If you are building a re-weld go ahead and weld up all of the rivet holes and start fresh or buy new rails, otherwise you are just making the task much more difficult or impossible to do.
The rail alignment fixture is simple to use but it will not solve the unrelated problems that come from re-welding a receiver and using rails with pre exsisting holes. It's only purpose is to properly align and check alignment of the placement of the rails to the centerline of the barrel bore.