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MOACKS has a baby!
To my surprise I've had only a few suggestions to make the MOACKS carrier key staker lighter. So I went ahead and did it anyway. The Pocket MOACKS is for the guy who needs a carrier key staker that takes up less room in the toolbox or travel kit and weighs a lot less.... and costs less, too. The penalty of course is that it does not have some of the "bonus" features of the original MOACKS, and it is a little slower to do a carrier with, but the size and weight advantage will be worth it to some. Also, it does one thing the MOACKS does not-- it can be used to counter stake the screw heads, an important part of the process if you ask me.
The P-MOACKS stakes the screws one at a time. Like the MOACKS it comes with a 5/32 Allen wrench with which to turn the staker screw, a 9/64 wrench for tightening the carrier key screws, and a 1/8" wrench for those carriers that use a non-standard screw with a 1/8 socket instead of the standard 9/64. With the P-MOACKS, the 9/64 or 1/8 wrench is used to position the tool properly by putting the wrench stem though a hole and into a carrier screw socket. Then the staker screw is turned in to touch, then turned in another 1 & 1/4 turns. Repeat four times.
To counter stake the screws, move the staker screw to the tapped hole in the top of the tool. Again use the 1/8 or 9/64 hole to locate the tool to a carrier key screw socket. Once the tool is located, the staker screw is turned in to touch plus one turn. Now there is screw head metal displaced outwardly that will impinge on the inwardly-displaced metal from the staking of the carrier key over the screw heads. Repeat once per carrier key screw.
I have been thinking about this for a year and prototyping it for a couple weeks now. I have run a small batch and have the blocks squared up for another small batch. The design may change slightly as I go along but only in terms of cosmetics. The first ones will have screws slightly longer than pictured as I use up some extras from my last run of MOACKS. The new tool, like the MOACKS, is made from gen-u-ine gun steel, not reconstituted car bodies-- it's Crucible Steel prehardened 4140. These are $70 plus $10 S&H to anywhere in the US or to APO's.....
Staking carrier key material over screw heads. 9/64 Allen wrench through top is locating tool to one of the carrier key screws.
http://www.louderthanwords.us/smallf...2770154452.jpg
Counter-staking the carrier key screws themselves. Again the 9/64 wrench works as a tool locator.
http://www.louderthanwords.us/smallf...2770154441.jpg
http://www.louderthanwords.us/smallf...7301096753.jpg
http://www.louderthanwords.us/smallf...7301096682.jpg
The tool, with screw put in from inside for storage (so it doesn't protrude and takes up less room).
http://www.louderthanwords.us/smallf...7301096701.jpg
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I'll take one Ned, that's pretty cool as is everything you make. :D
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I am trying to decide which model to order.
Any chance you got a pic of the two difference sizes side-by-side???
Might be nice to see...
Either way, thanks for offering us such nice inventions Mr. Christiansen!
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Now that thing is not going anywhere!
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That's excellent Ned! I'll be buying one.
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I'll try to get a side by side pic. I can tell you how the weights compare, approx. 21 oz vs/ approx. 4 oz.
Some notes:
Once the screw heads are counter-staked, you can't get a wrench back into the socket to remove them. If you could, you probably still would twist or break the wrench before the screw came loose. The key is not an item that wears or otherwise needs to routinely come off, so..... who cares. It needs to be on there tight and right to keep the gun working, that's what matters.
Because the wrench won't go in after counter-staking, there would be a problem counter staking the second screw since the first one's socket won't accept the wrench stem for locating. To fix this, both the 9/64 and 1/8 wrench stems have a little metal ground off off two flats on the long end. This end is not used for wrenching anyway; the removed material allows the reduced area to be indexed to and inserted into where the screw socket is slightly deformed.
The hole in the tool for the 9/64 wrench to pass through for locating, obviously will be a little loose when the 1/8 wrench must be used. The dif is of no consequence. The mis-location would be max .007", not something that's gonna make any dif.
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Ned, any chance for a hole through a non-essential area for dummy cording with 550? I'd hate to see these 'walk' away.
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No prob. Anybody wanting that could have it at n/c for the asking.
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I will absolutely take one of these. I already have the MOACKS but it does take up a good amount of room in the range bag. Resq47 good call on the hole for paracord to secure the thing.
What is the prefered method to keep these things from rusting? My MOACKs got a light powder of rust, so now I store it in the ziplock bag it came in after giving it a good dousing of oil and that seems to work. I'd love to be able to just store the tool loose in the bag. Any chance that the outer surface of the tool could be supplied with a more textured finish so that the end-user could apply a spray-and-bake finish (like Norell's) to help with the rust issue?
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The best method is me making them from stainless-- but for a couple reasons I don't think that's gonna happen. I reckon I could blast them upon request.