Toz 35 Modifications
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toz 35
David's comment as to POI being lost in wobble within your hold is valid and would hold true for most all shooters just as he stated. I was speaking strictly from a precision point of view ie. firing from a ransom rest where wobble has been eliminated. The guy asked if it could change the point of impact. Answer: Yes! Will it make any difference to him or anyone else? Probably not!
As for whether Neal's weight came with the gun or not...he told me in January of this year that he "had one made" for his Toz and suggested I do the same. In the same sentence, he mentioned the bit about barrel harmonics. In the end, whether the pistol came with the weight or was added later, is really just splittin' hairs...isn't it?
Incidentally my Toz, after I finished refurbishng it, shoots 10 shot groups down to .336" from a rest at 50M . I'll never shoot it that well, but...that also is "incidental"! ;^)
Reid
As for whether Neal's weight came with the gun or not...he told me in January of this year that he "had one made" for his Toz and suggested I do the same. In the same sentence, he mentioned the bit about barrel harmonics. In the end, whether the pistol came with the weight or was added later, is really just splittin' hairs...isn't it?
Incidentally my Toz, after I finished refurbishng it, shoots 10 shot groups down to .336" from a rest at 50M . I'll never shoot it that well, but...that also is "incidental"! ;^)
Reid
Last edited by agentr on Mon Oct 10, 2011 12:22 am, edited 1 time in total.
toz 35
This mod removed 35-40 grams from total weight of my toz 35. (the drill shavings ended up all over my shop making it difficult to determine exact weight reduction) I'll clean up the rough edges later and will probably remove less than one gram
- chuckjordan
- Posts: 121
- Joined: Mon Apr 09, 2007 11:00 pm
- Location: Central Virginia
removing TOZ 35 barrel
No pins holding it in, right hand thread. Remove the extractor. You need to put the barrel in a barrel vise with the properly sized bushing for the diameter. Turn the action with a crescent wrench. HOWEVER...you should put a block of steel of the proper width in-between the two thin parts of the frame to keep from bending them. Pad the frame with some brass shim to keep the wrench from scratching it. Note the index mark on the bottom of the barrel so that you can get it back to the same point. It should screw right out.
- Freepistol
- Posts: 773
- Joined: Sun Feb 10, 2008 5:52 pm
- Location: Berwick, PA
Ideally, lathe turning a barrel is the proper procedure to re-crown a muzzle. As mentioned previously, there is another way to obtain a precision result as the illustrations show....Greg Derr wrote:... the barrel should be turned in a lathe to insure concentricity to the bore for the new crown....
http://tinyurl.com/43xygjs
It takes longer than 5 minutes, though.
Last edited by zoned on Thu Oct 06, 2011 12:39 am, edited 2 times in total.
Re: toz 35
Again!agentr wrote:I recrowned my 35 with the barrel in place. Buy (from Brownells) or rent (from 4-d reamers) an 11* crowning tool with the proper bushing and you'll be done in 5 min!
- chuckjordan
- Posts: 121
- Joined: Mon Apr 09, 2007 11:00 pm
- Location: Central Virginia
Thanks all! I see the alignment marks.
I have a friend with a 4-jaw chuck and he's crowned airgun bbls, also my Marlin 39a. Centers from the bore and has a special bit. It takes about 15 minutes to center the bore, and 1-2 to cut the crown.
I know the muzzle is recessed (protected). I'd like to do it flat like the factory.
My gunsmith has the 11' tool which I'll use as a last resort.
I'd like to get it right so I don't beat myself up later when I miss (I won't be able to blame the TOZ then).
Question: 11' crown or 0' ?? (in the 4-jaw chuck, of course) ?? The factory crown looks to be 0'
That's why I like this forum, so many helpful people.
I have a friend with a 4-jaw chuck and he's crowned airgun bbls, also my Marlin 39a. Centers from the bore and has a special bit. It takes about 15 minutes to center the bore, and 1-2 to cut the crown.
I know the muzzle is recessed (protected). I'd like to do it flat like the factory.
My gunsmith has the 11' tool which I'll use as a last resort.
I'd like to get it right so I don't beat myself up later when I miss (I won't be able to blame the TOZ then).
Question: 11' crown or 0' ?? (in the 4-jaw chuck, of course) ?? The factory crown looks to be 0'
That's why I like this forum, so many helpful people.
Manson crowning tool
To add to your options. I purchased one of Dave Manson's Crowning tools and 5 pilots. I redid a number of crowns on match guns that had been crowned with my Brownell's tool. The process is simplicity itself and in about 5 minutes per barrel cuts a perfect 11 degree crown. Only failure was trying it on a pair of old Norinco 9mm barrels that turn out to be machined and then HARD CHROMED. All the carbide cutter could do with the hand force applied is polish the surface. True, the tool is considerably more expensive than the Brownell tool, but IMHO it is far superior and unlike the lathe, does not require any disassembly.
Dr Jim
Dr Jim
toz 35
I went with the 11*. There is no protection for a flush cut crown. The reason I went with a crown cutter and not a lathe is that it VERY difficult to ensure your new crown will be perpendicular to the bore UNLESS you use the crown cutter. Furthermore, if you don't have a 35M, the front sight shroud is a pressed fit, and will be difficult to re-align if removed. The 11* cutter, cuts just inside the shroud, so you can cut it in place. This crown achieves groups under .34" at 50 meters. Your choice?
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Re: toz 35
Well you can't argue with that result.agentr wrote:I went with the 11*... This crown achieves groups under .34" at 50 meters.
What kind of groups did you get before the recrown?
And, was poor grouping the reason you recrowned it in the first place?
toz 35
The crown , before the re-crown, had a visible gnash in it. I did not Ransom Rest the pistol like I did after the recrown. Testing had been done off sandbags achieving 1.5-3" groups. This could not be considerd a fair comparison because Ransom Rest testing is so much more reliable than a sand bag. I merely wanted to point out that you don't HAVE to use a lathe to get a good result when re-crowning a barrel.
NOTE: That's ten shots NOT just five. (.556"-22cal=.336" is best of several attempts but all were under .8" depending on the ammo used)
NOTE: That's ten shots NOT just five. (.556"-22cal=.336" is best of several attempts but all were under .8" depending on the ammo used)
Last edited by agentr on Thu Oct 20, 2011 12:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
toz 35
Here's the finished rebuild of my toz 35. I took 168 grams (6oz) off the entire pistol with the removal of wood from the grip, metal from the frame, and removal of the front stock (56g) Total pistol weight is 1177 grams (2.66lbs or 42.56oz). See all the different stages (author agentr) of the rebuild starting at page 7 of this thread. This is what happens when a dremel tool is fused with an ample amount of boredom!
- chuckjordan
- Posts: 121
- Joined: Mon Apr 09, 2007 11:00 pm
- Location: Central Virginia
Total Strip of Trigger Unit
I've stripped apart most of my TOZ-35, it's going in for a reblue. All except for the sear parts in the trigger unit.
The trigger unit has two .040" pins holding sear parts. And I don't have a drift punch that thin. I've used brad nails thin enough, but, they don't have the strength and bend as these pins are 'pinned' in rather tight.
Suggestions? I'd rather not reblue the trigger unit with the sear parts as 1-2 parts appear to be stainless?
Pics of trigger unit below:
My last option is to strip only the rust off (bead-blast it) and then use Dicropan for a chem. blue. Not as good as a caustic bluing/blackening.
The trigger unit has two .040" pins holding sear parts. And I don't have a drift punch that thin. I've used brad nails thin enough, but, they don't have the strength and bend as these pins are 'pinned' in rather tight.
Suggestions? I'd rather not reblue the trigger unit with the sear parts as 1-2 parts appear to be stainless?
Pics of trigger unit below:
My last option is to strip only the rust off (bead-blast it) and then use Dicropan for a chem. blue. Not as good as a caustic bluing/blackening.
Toz 35
Go to a machine supply shop. They will have the proper punch and Lowes might as well ($4-8). Make sure you are drifting from the left side of the frame (left side while looking down the sights). Your pins appear to be staked from the right (mushroomed on the right side) but double check and drift from the non-mushroomed side. Make sure the pistol frame is mounted securely in a vise as close to the pins as possible, and still allow access, or the proper force is difficult to deliver to the pin. Hopes this helps
- chuckjordan
- Posts: 121
- Joined: Mon Apr 09, 2007 11:00 pm
- Location: Central Virginia