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03-23-2014, 09:58 PM | #41 | |
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European angles are 60, 65, 70 and 75 for most of the gun industry. So if you measure 63.5 for some reason that should be actually 65. Or you can use known dimensions to calculate angle with given formula which brings us to 67.5 angle for the front post male dovetail. Last edited by SIGP2101; 03-23-2014 at 10:54 PM. |
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03-24-2014, 08:52 AM | #42 | |
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I'm not sure how they solved this in the factories, but one or two quick strokes with an angled file would cut a taper wide enough to start the sight blade. This is what I would do for a DIY job, and it might be what they had to do in the factories as well. Unless it's the sight blade being tapered... It's kind of difficult to measure, so I don't know for sure. |
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03-24-2014, 09:57 AM | #43 | |
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That sounds the simplest way. Could you please post the dimensions of the Luger artillery barrel, especially the rear sight base dovetail?
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I use the plastic template to get my angle, then use the machinist's level to transfer that angle to my fixture [second pic]. This is a Luger feed ramp being cut. The dovetail dimensions are less than a tenth of an inch in any direction; hard for me to see light under the template. 60º seems to be the closest I can come, so 60º it is.
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03-24-2014, 10:31 AM | #44 |
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Trial and error is probably best. 60 degress/58 degrees will probably work the best for an interference fit if you don't have a setscrew to hold the sight in place. If you do, the 2 degrees difference won't make much of a difference with a setscrew.
alternative 2. You can also use a CAD program to draw a variety of dovetails, then print them out, and cut them and see how they fit in the dovetail you are using as your example. BTW, did you check the Luger blueprints to see what angle is actually specified on the P.08 for the sight dovetail? The same measurement is probably used for the LP.08, and since you are talking about a sight for NAMBU, which never had an artillery version before, I don't think the dovetail police will visit you if you freelance the dovetail size. BTW, Dimensions shown on the front sight blade above are IDENTICAL on the blueprints to the dimensions for the dovetail that sight fits into Also, Someone recently posted the blueprint of an artillery barrel from a published reference book. I don't remember who did it, or what the subject of the thread was, but if you can find that posting, the angle of the dovetail on an artillery barrel is probably in that drawing...
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03-24-2014, 11:27 AM | #45 |
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Have you had any luck with the CAD yet? It's great when you want to determine an angle, and only have the side dimensions to go by. Just draw it and snap the angle, and you'll get an accurate number without having to do the trigonometry. I have made some templates by printing them and transfering to cardboard or acetate, it works well if you're lazy like me.
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04-05-2014, 11:42 AM | #46 | ||
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I have it installed and have tried a few simple images. What I did isn't all that different from PSP. There is a long tutorial and I'll try to print out the simple sample and see if it is in any way intuitive [to me!].
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04-08-2014, 05:11 PM | #47 |
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It's actually more like MS Paint to me, simple and intuitive once you learn where the right command buttons are located. I used it every day when I worked for a cabinet factory, and it took just a few days to get the hang of the basics. You'll really see the benefits once you have built up a decent library of drawings. No more anxiety over that sketch you found wadded up in the pocket of a pair of jeans you just washed, or the one that got destroyed when you flipped over a container of quenching oil on the work bench. You just print a new one and go on.
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04-08-2014, 05:58 PM | #48 |
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Right now I can't find any 'delete' button. I have points & lines that need deleting, but the Point/Edit functions don't list any Delete function. (This is in the tutorial). Until I can delete my mistakes, there's not much usefulness to it. I'll play with it a while more. I don't have a lot of patience. I do have lots of envelopes.
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04-08-2014, 06:26 PM | #49 |
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Here is a dumb question, but can you click on the point/line in your drawing to highlight it and then just hit the "delete" button on your keyboard? Just asking because I do not have that program and have never used it.
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04-08-2014, 07:12 PM | #50 |
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You go to the "Edit" tab at the top, and hit the "Er" button. This will put you in erase mode, so any object you click on will be deleted. You can also do it like Ron suggested: Go to the "Select" tab, select the objects you want to delete, then hit "delete" on your keyboard. After that you hit "enter" to confirm, and the selected objects will be deleted.
You can select multiple objects by "drawing a rectangle" with the mouse (i.e. clicking two corners), but the most useful way is to hold down "Ctrl" and pick the objects by clicking on them. If you select the wrong object, just click on it again and it will be deselected. Once the correct objects are highlighted, hit "delete" and "enter". ...says the man who is painstakingly building an Artillery Nambu. Yeah, right. |
04-08-2014, 07:18 PM | #51 | |
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The delete key would be intuitive, wouldn't it??? I think I found how to delete text [it's the Er key]; now I just need to get rid of that pesky point I mistakenly added... I'm drawing the calculator, slowly...It's not very easy...Hey, my IQ is only 103... OK, I got through the tutorial. I now have a printed-out stick drawing of a calculator outline. Envelopes are much more intuitive.
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04-08-2014, 08:04 PM | #52 | |
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The Harvey 40º dovetail cutter works pretty good...I think I found my problem, G.T. - I have to knock off the sharp edge before trying to fit the sight blade... Too late now on three dovetails here...That edge seems to hold the blade up...
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04-08-2014, 10:19 PM | #53 | |
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04-10-2014, 04:35 PM | #54 |
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Still, easiest way is to use mm graphing paper. Draw what you want and read values directly of the paper. Substitute mm with cm and you accuracy reading could be within 0.01 mm/0.0004 in.
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