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  • Tinybear
    replied
    How hard would it be to Make a aluminum pro/carbine Front forgrip/feed neck. (Perhaps with a larger barrel opening or feed neck only so I can run my crossover barrel kit in it)? what would something like that cost?
    Alternatively I thought it be possibly to make a adapter that would mount the 98style feed necks onto the carbine/pro lite series markers.

    I truly enjoy running my pro/carbine. It’s a toss up between the carbine or the 68 Automag as my hands down favourite markers of all time. And although my forgrips in perfect condition. It’s the one part that’s near impossible to replace if it were to ever have an issue.

    Leave a comment:


  • Arthur
    replied
    I heard back from doc in less than 48hrs recently.

    Leave a comment:


  • caylegeorge
    commented on 's reply
    Hoping those PGP grip frames I sent you a while back are still in your queue and not the post office black hole?

  • DocsMachine
    replied
    Originally posted by Ecapnation View Post
    What the one thing you still want to build?
    -"One" thing? I haven't had just one thing on the "wanna do" list since elementary school.

    For paintball stuff, I have a longish list of fun custom projects that I'd love to do. I've had a plan for a pretty radical PGP for, like, fifteen years. Just before the old board croaked, I posted a thread starting a recreation of a classic early Carter pump. I have the grip and a couple other parts, and still want to finish it before too long. I have a 'Cocker I disassembled and sent off to have the anno stripped- before I learned how to do it myself - back in '96 (!) and it hasn't been touched since. I even have one of the rare old Marksmann/Smart Parts solid aluminum early-syle single-screw-grip slider frames for it.

    And the latest addition is now that Curt's talking about recreating the Morlock, I want to recreate my very early prototype E-Cocker, which I made before anyone'd even heard of the E-Blade.

    I also still have a ton of shop projects, machine-rebuild projects, a couple cars and hot-rods I'd love to work on...

    Out of sheer curiosity, How many customer projects do you have in queue right now vs. personal projects?
    -At the moment I only have about six customer projects on the table, I think only one, possibly two older than a month.

    The titanium bolt pin I posted in the Dead Zone is literally the first truly personal project I've worked on in probably six months.

    Doc.

    Leave a comment:


  • GanonsGrin
    replied
    Out of sheer curiosity, How many customer projects do you have in queue right now vs. personal projects?

    Leave a comment:


  • Ecapnation
    replied
    From a bored tinkerer....

    What the one thing you still want to build?

    Leave a comment:


  • DocsMachine
    replied
    Originally posted by Indeed View Post
    Doc, since you don't answer email or pm[...]
    -I answer what I receive, at least as many as I can. I can't find an email from you and your last PM was two months ago- which I replied to.

    I'll once again post here. I'd like my solenoids back.
    -On their way.

    Months have passed and there have been no updates or communications from you.
    -You, like so many others, assume that if you don't hear anything, I'm therefore not doing anything. In this day and age of hourly Twitter updates, Zoom meetings every fifteen minutes, daily Facebook briefings and a weekly podcast release, everyone assumes that if no one's heard from me in fifteen or twenty minutes, I've run off to lay in a hammock on the beach somewhere.

    This, suffice to say, is not the case.

    I can only assume that you are not interested[...]
    -Right. I've been doing this airsmith thing as a full-time day job for closing in on twenty-three years, and literally make my living designing and manufacturing products exactly like this, but I'm not interested.

    Pull the other one, it's got bells on it.

    [...]or too busy to work on this project.
    -Therein lies the rub. I do indeed have a great deal on my plate, and more is on the way. You demonstrate the ability to walk on water just once, and then everyone wants you to trot across the lake on an errand.

    I have a couple hundred dollars in material already cut and turned for this particular project, and several hours into doing up some proper drawings for the part. But hey, won't be the first time I've thrown money away... Good thing I make so much of it, right?

    I'd like to move forward with this and thus far I'm still waiting on you.
    -I had no idea I possessed the last two such solenoids on earth. They shall be returned forthwith and post haste.

    Doc.


    Leave a comment:


  • Indeed
    replied
    Doc, since you don't answer email or pm I'll once again post here. I'd like my solenoids back. Months have passed and there have been no updates or communications from you. I can only assume that you are not interested or too busy to work on this project. I'd like to move forward with this and thus far I'm still waiting on you.

    Leave a comment:


  • Arthur
    replied
    DocsMachine , question for you good sir:

    Recently acquired one of your AC adapters for mags. I tried to install it in my sydarm but it feels really tight. I might be neglecting something really obvious too, so forgive me. Just want to be careful with this relic.

    Leave a comment:


  • MrBarraclough
    commented on 's reply
    Thanks! These are great answers to questions that had been rattling around in my head. I had been eyeballing some of my old twistlock barrels and considering using my drill press to drill holes for finger detents, but decided not to chance it since I wouldn't have a good way of cutting the grooves for the detents to lay down into as the bolt passes by.

    I'll actually give cutting down the feedneck a shot. Since I now have a secondhand Minimag body on my Automag, I decided to experiment with the original stock body. The tube cutter I had on hand put a shallow groove in it but I don't think is ever going to cut through, given that it was meant for copper tubing and not stainless. That is assuming, of course, that I can fix my Dremel which I nearly burned up drilling out the bolts holding the original ASA on the rail.

  • dartamon
    replied
    If you were going to do a vertical feed Brass Eagle Raptor build, what would you include in it?

    Leave a comment:


  • DocsMachine
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBarraclough View Post
    Have you ever milled slots for rubber finger detents into twistlock Automag barrels? I would think the tooling setup for doing so would be virtually the same as for your adapters. Or would that just not be a cost-effective thing to do compared to simply using your adapter and getting an AC threaded barrel?
    -An interesting idea. I had not thought of doing so, and you're the first to ask. But yes, the wall thickness and whatnot is the same, so the only potential issue, off the top of my head, is possible interference with the twist-lock groove. I'd have to pull out an old barrel and check- and it my vary from barrel to barrel, since not all companies milled the barrel the same way.

    Which makes another question occur to me: Would it be possible (or practical) to convert a twistlock barrel by cutting off the breech and cutting AC threads into the barrel (assuming it is a one piece barrel)?
    -Possible, yes. I've done quite a few that way, particularly for those with "splash kits" that want to keep the matching barrel. One of my adapters, a conversion to 'Cocker thread, and a Freak bore, and all of a sudden your 25-year-old Eclipse Splash Kit can shoot modern paint again.

    What would be the preferable method for a home hobbyist to cut some length off the feedneck of an old stainless Automag body? Pipecutter, hacksaw, Dremel with cutting wheel, or something else?
    -If I didn't have a machine shop, what I'd do is wrap a turn of masking tape around the tend, with the edge of the tape where you want the tube cut. Wrap it carefully so the tape lines up- that is, one end comes around and is still level with the other end. That will help you make a "true" cut.

    I'd then get a Dremel and some of the little cut-off discs. And with a respirator- you do NOT want to breathe stainless steel dust- very carefully cut around the tube right at the edge of the tape. Take your time and go slow. And it's usually better to cut a circle several times, increasing the depth each time, rather than trying to slice through in one pass.

    You'll burn up a small handful of the wheels, but with patience it's fairly easy.

    Once you've parted it off, a small stone or sanding drum can be used to smooth the edges.

    Oh, and before you do any of that, double-check that you don't cut too much. It's a lot easier to take it off than put it back on.

    Doc.

    Leave a comment:


  • MrBarraclough
    replied
    Some Automag-related questions:

    I'm enjoying my Doc's Adapter in my Automag, but I'm a little sad that my collection of twistlock barrels are effectively now obselete. My buddy still uses twistlocks in his mag, but current force-fed hoppers tend to overpower the nubbins, especially with today's smaller paint. Have you ever milled slots for rubber finger detents into twistlock Automag barrels? I would think the tooling setup for doing so would be virtually the same as for your adapters. Or would that just not be a cost-effective thing to do compared to simply using your adapter and getting an AC threaded barrel?

    Which makes another question occur to me: Would it be possible (or practical) to convert a twistlock barrel by cutting off the breech and cutting AC threads into the barrel (assuming it is a one piece barrel)?

    What would be the preferable method for a home hobbyist to cut some length off the feedneck of an old stainless Automag body? Pipecutter, hacksaw, Dremel with cutting wheel, or something else? Should the inside of the tube be reinforced with a dowel or something while cutting? AGD was awfully generous with the tubing on those stock feednecks and they make for a super tall marker compared to most of today's direct vertical feed models.

    Thanks,

    Leave a comment:


  • DocsMachine
    replied
    Originally posted by XEMON View Post
    I have a 56-1/8 by 3/8 band saw (tabletop). Its usually setup for wood cutting, any metal blades out there for this saw?
    Ive been looking for a bit, and would like to avoid buying a whole new saw (no room).
    -I don't know of that particular size in general, but the trick to doing metal on a wood bandsaw is the blade speed. Wood blades move way too fast for metal, You probably would be too bad with thin aluminum, but for steel, you'd burn the teeth off the blade. For steel, you generally want a blade speed in "feet per minute" (also known as "surface feet per minute", or SFPM) of around 180 to 250 FPM. For aluminum you can be closer to 500-700 FPM.

    If the saw itself doesn't have a way to slow it down, you'll have to add a "jackshaft" or gearbox of some sort. LOTS of how-tos online about that, a very common mod.

    As for the actual blade, again, just doing aluminum, a typical HSS/carbon steel wood blade will work, to a certain extent. For steel, you'll want the real thing, though- try sources like bandsawbladesdirect.com. I've bought from them a couple times, seems like a decent deal.

    Doc.

    Leave a comment:


  • Cunha
    replied
    Originally posted by DocsMachine View Post
    Well, really, that's just a long-winded way of asking "what's your favorite gun?"

    Arguably, there's a dozen or more current markers that would work, from any one of the top makers.

    But me, personally? I'm still a big old-school fan of the 'Cocker. Mainly just because I'm a gadget freak, and the 'Cocker is by far the most customizable marker we've ever had. I could come up with some hornswoggle about it being the most versatile, able to be a fast E-marker, a top-end mech, and even a pump, but in truth, I like 'em just 'cause they have lots of bits and bobs and moving parts and they're just generally fun to work on and shoot.

    Doc.
    Sort of the same question, but for me it would be more about the form of the game that shapes around the gun versus just the gun that I enjoy.

    My choice would be some stock class gun because I see it as a way of play that allows for a better game, that might even be a sport. On paper at least. I could see people caring about Olympic level stock class games, but not Olympic level semi auto ball games.

    Leave a comment:

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