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Steyr LP 10 Stabilizer
Posted: Sat May 02, 2009 7:33 pm
by Flavio Vieira
I use to shoot a Morini 162 EI, and I have bought a Steyr. My problem is: when I shot the pistol, the stabilizer hit hard the sight screw. The screw is marked, because the pistol is used, and the problem must be old.
Some one can help? I have to solve it by myself. I don`t have a Steyr assistence in Brazil.
Sorry for my bad english!
Stabilizer position after shot
Screw hammered by the stabilizer
Overview
Posted: Sat May 02, 2009 8:37 pm
by jacques b gros
Flávio, this screw was adopted, I think. My LP@ uses the same system and that screw does not protudes like that.
Te cuida
Posted: Sat May 02, 2009 9:05 pm
by Flavio Vieira
Jacques,
My wife has a LP10 too. Her gun has the same screw, but the stabilizer doesn`t touch the screw when you fire the gun. In my case, the stabilizer is hammering the screw and he is not stabilizing equally the shot, he is comming too much back.
Posted: Sun May 03, 2009 7:03 am
by fkw
I think that is the way it should be.
I have a new Steyr LP10 with stabilizer. The screw is there to stop the backward movement of tungsten stabilizer. Looks like it does not belong there. But that is the way it is from Steyr new.
Posted: Sun May 03, 2009 9:08 am
by jacques b gros
Forget all bellow. Your pistol is all right. At the first look, I tought that your stabilizer was out of the bolt, but then (after writing this doctoral paper...) at a closer look, the photos are the same. My pistol is dirtier from grip sanding...
Just tested my LP@, the screw is the same (sorry), but the stabilizer only touches the screw when you cock the pistol, it serves to move stabilizer back to its starting position.
The first pic shows the screw pushing the stabilizer to its starting position at the front of the bolt, the other two show the stabilizer after the shot.
When I shoot, the stabilizer moves less than a cm, quite far from the screw. It seems that your stabilizer is coming too far. Probably escaped from the retainer, but see the drawing and 3 little springs and balls that you'll prob ably loose when trying to fix... ;-))
There is someone in Sao Paulo, called Berton, that probably will fix it for you. Send me an email to
jbgros@terra.com.br and by the end of the day I'll send you his phones.
Instructions for adjusting the stabilizer
Posted: Thu Jun 16, 2011 10:08 am
by J_Nuke
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LEe2LS9lll0
Here is an instruction how to adjust the stabilizer on a lp10
Would not recomend to do it if you don't know exctly what you are doing.
The settings is related to the muzzle velocity and I don't know how sensitive the stabilizer according to the muzzle velocity is.
Re: Instructions for adjusting the stabilizer
Posted: Fri Jun 17, 2011 1:03 am
by TB
J_Nuke wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LEe2LS9lll0
Here is an instruction how to adjust the stabilizer on a lp10
Would not recomend to do it if you don't know exctly what you are doing.
The settings is related to the muzzle velocity and I don't know how sensitive the stabilizer according to the muzzle velocity is.
Yes that is the video to watch. It is rather easy to do and the setting is
not related to muzzle velocity at all. On the video you can see that he doesen't even release air when he test the setting.
The tension in Flavio Vieira's stabiliser spring is too hard. Loosen it according to the instruction video and you will be fine no matter the muzzle velocity of your pistol.
Stabilizer Lp10
Posted: Fri Jun 17, 2011 1:58 am
by J_Nuke
If I change the muzzle velocity the I also change the amount of momentum (don't know if the English term is correct, see link) (bevægelsesmængde DK) (rörelsemängd SV). And that must be related to settings of the stabilizer.
If I change one setting, the stabilizer or the muzzle velocity, the stabilizer won't absorb the impulse caused by the movement of the pellet.
p=m*v
p=amount of momentum
m=mass
v=velocity
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Momentum
Think this is a way you can look at it. Is it correct or have I forgotten something?
Best regards / J
Posted: Fri Jun 17, 2011 3:05 am
by TB
You are right that the muzzle velocity and the stabilizer setting will have to be related to work as intended. I think I misunderstod you. What I meant was that the muzzle velocity will not have an effect on the specific stabilizer setting. According to Steyr's website the correct muzzele velocity for a LP10 is 155 m/s. I would assume that the stabilizer setting they show in the video is the correct one for 155 m/s