Steyr tools
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Steyr tools
Question. What is the name of the steyr evo 10 tool that you use to adjust the rear sight part 38? http://www.steyr-sport.com/en/downloads ... -10-1/file
I can't find the darn allen wrench and I'm pretty sure it's not coming back. It's the smallest one in the set.
I can't find the darn allen wrench and I'm pretty sure it's not coming back. It's the smallest one in the set.
- Brian Girling
- Posts: 108
- Joined: Thu Apr 17, 2014 8:52 am
- Location: Staffordshire, United Kingdom
Re: Steyr tools
Part 38 in the diagram is a "slotted cheese head screw" so an allen wrench would be no good. I have no experience of the Evo other than looking at the file you indicated so I could be wrong.
Re: Steyr tools
"slotted cheese head screw"
Is that like a Torx head?
Is that like a Torx head?
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- Posts: 5617
- Joined: Mon Mar 01, 2004 12:49 pm
- Location: Ruislip, UK
Re: Steyr tools
No, it's a circular head with straight parallel sides, with a single slot for a flat screwdriver.left360 wrote:"slotted cheese head screw"
Is that like a Torx head?
Re: Steyr tools
What's funny is those two screws definitely have hexagonal nut slots, not a flat screwdriver slot. So I'm not sure why they're called a slotted cheese head screw, but hey, as long as I can adjust it, that's what matters. I'll leave the engineering to the experts.David Levene wrote:No, it's a circular head with straight parallel sides, with a single slot for a flat screwdriver.left360 wrote:"slotted cheese head screw"
Is that like a Torx head?
Re: Steyr tools
I have no idea what a "slotted cheese head screw" is and I don't think I want to. Does it differ from the "phillips cheese head screw"?
I have found that German companies will spend millions of $ to engineer a firearm that will put one round on top of the last one all day long. But when it comes to translating anything into English they pay a middle school 16 year old $0.50 an hour to turn technical German into bad English.
I have found that German companies will spend millions of $ to engineer a firearm that will put one round on top of the last one all day long. But when it comes to translating anything into English they pay a middle school 16 year old $0.50 an hour to turn technical German into bad English.
Re: Steyr tools
Holy Crap!
Ok i just googled "cheese head screw" and got 350,000 hits. Its a screw with a cylindrical head shaped like a round of cheese.
Ok i just googled "cheese head screw" and got 350,000 hits. Its a screw with a cylindrical head shaped like a round of cheese.
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Re: Steyr tools
that is a hex socket cheese head IMO. They are quite rare (try to find them on Ebay) because the hex socket is either shallow or narrow and cant take a heavy torque without the allen key chewing up the socket.
Double up the head depth and it becomes a hex socket cap head screw.
Double up the head depth and it becomes a hex socket cap head screw.
Re: Steyr tools
Truth. The Steyr manual is absolutely horrible. It doesn't even tell you which tools to use on which adjustments, just leaving that to you. The description of the ways of modifying the rear sights is awful. I had to do a fair bit of practice (and I still slip from time to time) with the whole windage/height adjustments thing. It took some time for my feeble American mind to understand just what the hell was going on. Normally when something says "right" on it here, it means "gun points to the right...." not "okay, you hit to the right so twist the screw this way to fix that"gwsb wrote:I have no idea what a "slotted cheese head screw" is and I don't think I want to. Does it differ from the "phillips cheese head screw"?
I have found that German companies will spend millions of $ to engineer a firearm that will put one round on top of the last one all day long. But when it comes to translating anything into English they pay a middle school 16 year old $0.50 an hour to turn technical German into bad English.
Anyways, dead horse beaten.
I'm not going to ask what your 350,000 hits for "cheese head screw" contained...but I'm going to hazard a guess that not all of it was work safe.
Different strokes, I guess....
- SlartyBartFast
- Posts: 579
- Joined: Fri Jun 10, 2016 11:04 am
- Location: Montreal, Québec, Canada
Re: Steyr tools
Technical manuals are my profession. The crappy quality of documentation on a whole host of expensive equipment really bothers me.Chia wrote:The Steyr manual is absolutely horrible.
And foreign suppliers so often have an "anyone can write English" attitude.
- Smith & Wesson SW22 Victory
- FAS SP607
- FAS SP607
Re: Steyr tools
In a mysterious coincidence, those same crappy technical manuals on expensive products are also involved in my profession. The proper term is "failure to warn," I think, and it makes the manufacturer liable for failing to disclose harmful issues in the provided documentation. It's not my area of law, but that's my rough understanding of it.SlartyBartFast wrote:Technical manuals are my profession. The crappy quality of documentation on a whole host of expensive equipment really bothers me.
And foreign suppliers so often have an "anyone can write English" attitude.
So yeah. Anyone can write English. Doesn't mean that they should.
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Re: Steyr tools
I think England should start charging the rest of the world royalties for using English.
Re: Steyr tools
Oh boy. You just had to go there! If I had time I'd give you a diatribe on British English versus American English but I don't. Consider yourself lucky! :)TenMetrePeter wrote:I think England should start charging the rest of the world royalties for using English.
Re: Steyr tools
Or a fine for every misuse - would solve the UK financial situation.TenMetrePeter wrote:I think England should start charging the rest of the world royalties for using English.
They could start in Glasgow and work out from there.
Re: Steyr tools
Or in Somerset, where there is a lovely local habit of asking "where've you been to?", which is answered by "I been town". In my experience very few people have an accurate understanding of English grammar. In this thread we have already had several sentences that do not contain a main verb.Spencer wrote:They could start in Glasgow and work out from there.
It's what you get from creating a language from the dialects spoken by various Germanic and Scandinavian pirates. Lingua Latina vera lingua est.
Re: Steyr tools
English? Ya'll speak English over there?
I once shot next to a Scotsman at Bisley for a week and never understood a word he said, but it was in theory "English"
Makes me want to get a spanner from the boot and hit somebody in the head.
I once shot next to a Scotsman at Bisley for a week and never understood a word he said, but it was in theory "English"
Makes me want to get a spanner from the boot and hit somebody in the head.
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- Posts: 164
- Joined: Sun Jun 09, 2013 7:59 am
- Location: Shropshire. ENGLAND.
Re: Steyr tools
They are slotted on the LP10.David Levene wrote:No, it's a circular head with straight parallel sides, with a single slot for a flat screwdriver.left360 wrote:"slotted cheese head screw"
Is that like a Torx head?
On the EVO 10 it's either an Allen head or torq.
Don't have my EVO to hand to check.
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- Posts: 164
- Joined: Sun Jun 09, 2013 7:59 am
- Location: Shropshire. ENGLAND.
Re: Steyr tools
I now have an EVO 10 in front of me. As well as my LP10.
The screws have been changed from the LP10.
They are now Allen screws.
The correct Allen key is not included in the Steyr tool kit.
It's a 1.27 metric.
The screws have been changed from the LP10.
They are now Allen screws.
The correct Allen key is not included in the Steyr tool kit.
It's a 1.27 metric.