The Accurate Reloading Forums
Filling extra holes in a receiver

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https://forums.accuratereloading.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/9411043/m/2461038372

27 February 2023, 09:12
ssdave
Filling extra holes in a receiver
Know this is old and common practice to most here, but thought I'd post for anyone that hasn't seen it before. Had a hole to fill today, so took pictures.

To fill a hole in an action (or barrel), thread in a tight fitting screw (deform the threads slightly if needed, at the bottom end). Cut off 1/16" or so above the surface, and use a light hammer to peen and swell up the screw into the hole tightly, mushrooming over the metal to just proud of the surface. File off, and polish, and it will be nearly invisible when blued or color cased.




27 February 2023, 11:03
SDH
Rust blue will probably hide your filler screw but hot caustic blue or case color hardening will quite probably show it, in my experience.
I can also see where your hammering has altered the bevel on the front of the action. You can lightly file up the bevel to match.


ACGG Life Member, since 1985
27 February 2023, 19:24
dpcd
I plug them with a screw and saw off the head, leaving 1/16 sticking out. TIG melt it.
28 February 2023, 05:18
Atkinson
The best Ive seen was driving a red hot pin it a bored out screw hole..hides best under a bright light, or sunshine done right. Not sure of the specifics just the results.


Ray Atkinson
Atkinson Hunting Adventures
10 Ward Lane,
Filer, Idaho, 83328
208-731-4120

rayatkinsonhunting@gmail.com
28 February 2023, 07:07
TCLouis
dpcd
Do you "weld" the screw to the action with the TIG or just use the arc to melt the screw flat to the receivers surface.



Don't limit your challenges . . .
Challenge your limits


28 February 2023, 07:51
dpcd
You weld the screw to the receiver, but it's not very deep with TIG. If you just melted the screw you would still have a pit. And that would be harder to do than just melting both together. TIG is like making a little puddle of pudding. Sort of.
02 March 2023, 05:55
Fal Grunt
Just as a sales plug, I make and sell threaded inserts, 6-48 and 8-40, 1018 and 4140.

Thread it in until it is flush with the bottom of the hole, cut the top off nearly flush, put a healthy chamfer on both the screw and the hole, run a root pass around, fill, file.

I found that using screws was problematic at times.


Nathaniel Myers
Myers Arms LLC
nathaniel@myersarms.com
www.myersarms.com
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I buy Mauser actions, parts, micrometers, tools, calipers, etc. Specifically looking for pre-WWII Mauser tools.
02 March 2023, 07:38
Bobster
When our shop got a TIG last year a friend of mine came by to teach us how to weld with it. He had worked for Union Carbide and ESAB for many years as an instructor. He showed us how to fill pits by snipping a bit of steel wire and laying it in the pit. Then puddle it with the TIG torch.

quote:
Originally posted by dpcd:
You weld the screw to the receiver, but it's not very deep with TIG. If you just melted the screw you would still have a pit. And that would be harder to do than just melting both together. TIG is like making a little puddle of pudding. Sort of.

03 March 2023, 08:02
copperlake
quote:
Originally posted by dpcd:
I plug them with a screw and saw off the head, leaving 1/16 sticking out. TIG melt it.


AND, that's the best way to avoid undercuts. A nice little pimple.
03 March 2023, 20:20
Duane Wiebe (CG&R)
Just another way...I ream out the hole and drive in a taper pin...Like DCPD, leave about 1/16" above and tig.

No chance of crud from the threads migrating into the weld
05 March 2023, 07:07
Kolo-Pan
If one does that on the front ring of a receiver does it need to be reheat treated.


KJK