New Morini compensator
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New Morini compensator
Can anyone tell me who makes this?
http://www.euroshooting.eu/en/index.php ... etail=1230
http://www.euroshooting.eu/en/index.php ... etail=1230
Comp - Muzzle Brake Cleaner
You take it apart. Who designed this comp? That is a GREAT idea.
And I have a question. Does ultrasonic cleaning eliminate the need to pick and prod at crud inside a regular one piece comp?
And I have a question. Does ultrasonic cleaning eliminate the need to pick and prod at crud inside a regular one piece comp?
Re: Comp - Muzzle Brake Cleaner
yes - no - maybe.shadow wrote:...Does ultrasonic cleaning eliminate the need to pick and prod at crud inside a regular one piece comp?
When using white spirit as the solvent (make sure any plastic parts are not put in the white spirit), an ultrasonic bath will get must crud from most firearms parts, given enough time.
The need to 'pick and prod' is usually only for REALLY stubborn crud.
There are some really great commercial solvents available for ultrasonic cleaning, but either water, or white spirit seems to work for me.
In my experience with ultarsonic cleaning of firearms parts:
- for regular cleaning, 5 - 10 minutes gets most parts clean. I usually give the part/s 5 minutes, then inspect - if there is still crud, a bit of applied elbow grease with a bristle brush, then another 5 minutes normally is all that is needed.
- for stubborn crud, soaking in either degreaser or penetrating oil before putting the part/s in the cleaner usually gets the desired result.
- ultrasonic cleaning works a treat on black powder pistols. I can see machining marks on the inside of the chambers that I never knew were there.
- will not remove alox from an old set of lubrisizer dies that had been sitting in the back of a drawer for over a decade (boiling in water did the trick for these dies).
I have two ultarsonic baths in the workshop.
One with water as the solvent, and a spray of window cleaner on the parts to be cleaned (loosens up crud before putting in the cleaner bath) works on spectacles, wife's jewellery, etc.
The other uses white spirit as the solvent (as above). A hit with compressed air to get out/off any remaining solvent, followed by a coating of oil works well - the coating of oil is necessary as the cleaned parts are usually clean enough to start surface rust within a short period of time.
Spencer
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did you see the grouppings?
No one mentioned the difference in the groupping of the shots!. The difference is fantastic!
and no mention either on the weight of the thing: 138g. At the end of a long barrel, this will destroy the pistol's balance.
and no mention either on the weight of the thing: 138g. At the end of a long barrel, this will destroy the pistol's balance.
Gotta take any claims from the manufacturer/seller with a grain of salt though. The group show difference between with/without the compensator. I wouldn't be surprized if when compared with stock compensator there would be no statistically significant difference.The difference is fantastic!
P.S. Still want one!
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the weight is the problem
Alex, "fantastic" is close to "incredible" in this case... but this aside, I think the weight at the end of the barrel is the killing issue. 140g times the distance to the center of gravity multiplied by the size of Pamela Anderson's boobs (or whatever way you figure that force) is certainly too much.AAlex wrote:Gotta take any claims from the manufacturer/seller with a grain of salt though. The group show difference between with/without the compensator. I wouldn't be surprized if when compared with stock compensator there would be no statistically significant difference.The difference is fantastic!
P.S. Still want one!
Best
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Would it fit in a Hammerli 150
Suppose I can lay my hands on a 150. If I snip off, say, 4cm from the barrel, would this compensator fit in the remaining "stub"?
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- Posts: 24
- Joined: Sun Mar 12, 2006 10:30 pm
- Location: NJ