Saturday, October 15, 2011

RWS (Diana) Model 45 Disassembly, Part 2

On I go…

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With the barrel removed, I noticed that one of the washers looked suspiciously like a hardware store washer. Rusty too.

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The other washer is a characteristic Diana stamped shim washer.

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Underneath the wrong washer was another correct shim washer. So I probably have to make a replacement for the rusty one.

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The piston was sleeved.

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The sleeve and a washer that the end of the spring bears against.

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With the sleeve removed the cocking shoe fell into the piston. Not sure how it goes back together but I bet I’ll figure it out.

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The rod in the piston is both spring guide and safety actuator.

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I presume this square hole is what gets caught by the trigger assembly.

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The piston seal seemed to be plastic at first.

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But a gentle scrape with my fingernail shows it’s just dirty and compressed leather.

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I cleaned it off with some alcohol.

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I have no idea how to get the seal off. Any ideas? In a more sensible gun the steel bit there in the center would be a screw…

Friday, October 14, 2011

RWS (Diana) Model 45 Disassembly, Part 1

I finally got around to opening up my RWS branded Diana Model 45. It’s the second one I own and was shooting slightly slower (730fps w/ 7.9gr. CPL) than the Original branded one (800fps w/ 7.9 CPL). You can see earlier aesthetic improvements/downgrades to the rifle here.

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The rifle. I really need a larger workbench.

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This was an unwelcome surprise. Sheared screw on the scope mount. It was shifting anyway and needs a stop so I’ll have to mess with it.

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I punched out the dowel pin that retains the rear of the action (note, if you’re reading this and you don’t have a cross pin holding the action in, you don’t have an early model 45, you have the later one that is unlike this one.)

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Two phillips head screws for the front action.

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The action removed and inverted to show the trigger.

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The cocking linkage.

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Much better than welded ears for retaining the tube.

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The safety pulled out to show the little interference bar. Compare position to the picture below.

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The dowel pin that retains the action in the stock passes through the trigger assembly.

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Mounted in the spring compressor.

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I didn’t like that the force was applied to the end of the safety but what are you going to do?

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Two pins removed.

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Spring tension taken up and the trigger group removed. Things can start to fall out of the trigger group at this point so be observant.

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I pushed the piston up as far as I could. Note the spring and guide on the bench, forgot to take a picture of them.

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I need to remove the barrel to get the cocking linkage detached from the piston.

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Lock washer.

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That seems like an awfully thin pivot bolt…

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Ah, there’s a sleeve that’s the actual pivot.

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Which is a nice design as it avoids the screw being subjected to rotational forces and becoming too loose or tight.

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The end of the linkage unhooks.



More to come.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Aeron B96 CO2 Leak Quick Fix

Was down in Tennessee on vacation last week and one of the pistols--the Aeron B96--developed a very small leak.  I did an easy field repair and had no further problems, but now I'm home and it's time to make sure it's right.













The leak was coming from the top of the gas tube under the grip.















This cylindrical tool came with the pistol.  The internal boss fits a notch on the CO2 cap.















The cap removed.  The tool works for both the 12 gram cap as well as the bulk-fill.  I'm thinking its best to do this after shooting all the CO2 out of the gun first.















The opposite end of the tool has two pegs















This fits into the grip (over the gas tube)...















...and engages the notches on the grip retaining lock ring.













The entire grip slides off as a unit.















The two allen head bolts on the gas tube attach the tube to the frame. 















Of course, they're metric.  They need a 3mm allen wrench.















Removed.















Gas tube pulls right off.  Note the CO2 transfer port just right of my index finger.















One of the side benefits of using Crosman Pellgun oil is relatively simple leak detection.  This is clean now, but when taken apart last week, there was an obvious oil leak here. 















The ring was pretty beat.  I'm sure it's metric, but I'm not able to accurately measure it in this worn condition. 















Found a couple o-rings that looked like they'd fit the bill.  They're 5mm OD and 2mm thick.  Only the o-ring on the left side is critical to sealing.  Chose something that fits the counterbored hole in diameter and is a bit higher than the edge of the frame.  It'll squash and seal when the lower bolt is tightened.  The right side o-ring simply seals the underside of the allen bolt to the frame.  It really only needs fit under the head of the fastener to work.  I ended up wrapping the lower bolt threads with a couple layers of teflon tape as added insurance.  Greased the o-rings with a silicone dive grease. 















The top bolt allows for grip angle adjustment.  Wish there was an index scale on the side to repeat the angle adjustment.  OK, I really wish I'd thought ahead and marked a reference line.  I'll just have to shoot it and adjust if/as needed.  Yep.  Tough job.