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What do BBs, Elmers Glue and 1377 Grips Have in Common?

Started by BDS, November 09, 2012, 11:12:16 PM

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Trophyhunter49

Quote from: Davio on November 10, 2012, 11:12:56 AM
Substitute RTV for the glue and substitute pellets for the BB's and you will never be completely out of usable ammo (you know... in a pinch like when the zombies come).   :-*
;D ;D ;D ;D

7624452

I sit a one ounce sinker inside, filled with siliconized adhesive caulk and painted black.  The loose sinkers are to show what I put inside.  The grips were brown plastic from a 1377 phase II.  They feel pretty good now.
Stranded in California.

mudduck48

#17
Quote from: 7624452 on November 11, 2012, 11:53:58 PM
I sit a one ounce sinker inside, filled with siliconized adhesive caulk and painted black.  The loose sinkers are to show what I put inside.  The grips were brown plastic from a 1377 phase II.  They feel pretty good now.
And these grips are now on my 1377 Phase II that I'm working on. And yes, the weight in the grips sure makes a difference in the feel of the gun. ;)
We need to keep going and have fun doing it.

7624452

Stranded in California.

mudduck48

I'm bored and I look at what the Guest are looking at. That is how I found this.
This gun you made up sure helped me out. The grip frame, piston, valve and front pivot pin went into the build on my 1322. The lead grips are now on my 1377 phase II project. By the way, what all did you do to the valve?
We need to keep going and have fun doing it.

7624452

Quote from: mudduck48 on September 26, 2014, 04:33:34 PM
I'm bored and I look at what the Guest are looking at. That is how I found this.
This gun you made up sure helped me out. The grip frame, piston, valve and front pivot pin went into the build on my 1322. The lead grips are now on my 1377 phase II project. By the way, what all did you do to the valve?
I do not remember what I did to the valve, probably polished it a little and replaced the internals. Here is my post.  :)
Stranded in California.

Rex Havoc

I replaced the stock on my 2400 KT with an aluminum one with a built in power valve. The replacement grips I filled with epoxy putty. I ground off the ambidextrous ridge on the right grip, the grinding went into the epoxy. The left I built up the thumb ridge with the epoxy putty and ground it to fit. I then sprayed them with truck bed liner spray from a spray can. Weird stuff, really never sets up and the grip is always sorta "tacky".

Colt25

I actually don't mind the plastic grips  :-[

After making a solid steel FT pump, it feels much heavier in the front which is what I like. Hey Mr. 007, have some extra bills lying around? I might try your method anyway. Seems to work   :P

Sathiel

Mark

7624452

Quote from: Sathiel on October 18, 2014, 10:50:07 PM
Ever tried Play-Doh? Hehe

;D ;D
It would probably work for you as it would more than likely freeze solid.  :)
Stranded in California.