Help!
George
Hope these help!
If all else fails break out the Dremel with a cutting disk.
Z
This ones a wild one, but if there is a gap between the two halves maybe you could fit a hacksaw between them and saw the screw. Hacksaw blades are usually wavy if you look at them, so take it to a grinder to get the waves out and thin the blade enough to get it to fir. You can also try just hammering it flatter with a hammer and small anvil.
If you are screwed all the way around, you could try drilling the screws out and re-tapping next size larger, one nice thing (perhaps the ONLY nice thing!) about stripped allen screws is you have a nice pilot hole already made. Use a drill press if at all possible!
Let us know how it goes! Even the athiest gunsmiths will be praying for you
I hesitate to mention this, but if you drill out the head (usually a #15 bit will cut the head off the shaft of a #6 or #8 screw) and pull the ring halves apart you can sometimes have enough threaded shank exposed to slot w/Dremel or otherwise grab the shank and turn it out. I've never worked with Kimber rings, so I don't know this for sure.
I never tried an extractor on anything this small. If that hard steel breaks off you can't drill it out.
I just used some of the replacement Leupold 8-40 screws. I like them. They are both hard and tough. If the thread matches (6-48 or 8-40) I'll use the Leupold Torx when I put anything together from now on. They are $12/dozen from Brownells. Head size on the 8-40 Leup Torx comes in either .200 or .220, and I don't know how to specify!
[I type too slow, Duane suggested it first. I'd still try it last! Also, is there any chance someone Loctited or epoxied th escrews in place? Heating the screw through the head with a soldering iron helps in that case.]
Don
[This message has been edited by Don G (edited 06-19-2001).]
The extractor didn't work at all. I've drilled through all four frozen screws, and not a one will come out. I don't have a drill press, and don't know what to do.
I guess my next step is to wreck the rings just to salvage the scope. There is no measurable gap between the ring halves; I'll try a coping saw between the ring halves, unless someone here has a new plan.
George
[This message has been edited by GeorgeS (edited 06-19-2001).]
You don't -need- a drill press, you just have to be extra careful. Anyone here who tells you to use one ( me included!) is doing so because we screwed up something that cost money using a hand drill when we should have been using a drill press instead.
When you say you have drilled through all 4 screws, have you come out the other side? If so, then you're home free. Well sorta, but just keep drilling them out a size larger at a time and eventually the head will come off and your rings will separate.
As others have posted, sometimes there is enough of a nub to grab with small vise grips (my favorite tool for this job) but if they are cemented somehow you'll probably have to try drilling them out and re-tapping the holes.
I know this is a royal PIA to you, but might as well look on it as a learning exercise at this point.
Frank.
I didn't use a drill stand, the key is to get an absolutely tiny bit for the first hole which then acts as a pilot. I also had the mindset that the mounts only cost a few quid. If they had cost more I would have let a gunsmith do it.
I have drilled completely through the screws; I will get two or three more HSS drill bits in increasing diameter and drill them out.
As a great proponent of Blue Loctite on scope screws, I applied a bit of heat before starting the disassembly. Unfortunately, the previous owner had used the Red (permanent) Loctite which requires much more heat.
In any case, you have convinced me to keep trying; had they been Redfield-style rings, the Dremel would have been used right away.
Thanks again,
George
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Ray Atkinson