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71/84 parts sources?
Hi, does anybody know where I might find a magazine tube & spring for my 71/84? I have the follower and the cap, but not the rest.
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01-29-2011 06:26 PM
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Do It Yourself
Ok, here come's today's D-I-Y project. Finding the parts may well the kind of job that takes the rest of your life, and most of us would rather have a complete, functioning rifle before we die. Fortunately you have the follower and the cap. If you can borrow a complete 71/84 as a sample for copying, it should be possible to make the tube/have it made in any moderately well equipped machine shop.
What will bother most people more than the tube may well be the spring. Your chances of finding one are probably 5/8 of FA, to use a British
technical term. But it is quite feasible to WIND YOUR OWN, using a mandrel of appropriate diameter in the chuck of a screw-cutting lathe with an adequately long bed. The wire is fed in via a guide attached to the cross-slide or toolpost, and the spring pitch can then be set quite accurately, as if you were cutting a screw with a very long pitch.
And just to show that this is not just a product of my fantasy, and to save my typing fingers from further wear and tear, there is a little book for model engineers entitled "Spring Design and Manufacture" by "Tubal Cain", No. 19 in the Workshop Practice series, Argus Books*, ISBN 0 85242 925 8.
It has more than enough on theory and design principles to satisfy our needs, worked examples, illustration of the setup options, and even curves to allow for a reasonable prediction of "spring-back - the effect that the spring unwinds a bit when you you release the tension, so that you actually have to use a mandrel a bit smaller than the finished size would suggest. Then get a coil of piano wire of the appropriate diameter, and you're in business!
Otherwise you will be in the hens'-teeth searching game, and if you ever find a spare, it will have come from a scrapped rifle and have a price that makes you flinch.
Do It Yourself!

*Maybe now called Nexus - a long history of takeovers and renaming, I fear
Last edited by Patrick Chadwick; 01-30-2011 at 01:09 PM.
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The import of South American 71/84's(10 years ago) included piles of parts. The tube did not survive and lots of guys had to make their own. You can not find/but the part. Good luck.
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Well, thanks for the encouragement, anyways. I never thought of winding a spring, sounds like a fun challenge. I was thinking I might be able to use one from a lever gun or shotgun, if I could find one that would approximately fit. For the tube, if I can't find an original, I'm going to check my steel suppliers for tubing.
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Tubing suggestion

Originally Posted by
britarms
I was thinking I might be able to use one from a lever gun or shotgun, if I could find one that would approximately fit.
Almost no chance - a) the 71/84 tube is longer than the magazine tube on anything else. b) Shotgun tubes woud be too wide, LARs too thin.

Originally Posted by
britarms
I'm going to check my steel suppliers for tubing.
If you cannot find suitable steel tubing - why not use thin-walled brass tubing a.k.a. telescope tubing. The tube is not visible when the rifle is assembled!
Try a commercial non-ferrous metal supplier. Metric sizes should go from a couple of mm up to about 30mm, with 1mm or even 0.5mm wall thickness. Inch sizes may be more restricted. A brass tube will be much easier to work.
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The spring, unforunately, is too easy!
Order this one:
Magazine Spring
---------- Post added at 05:05 AM ---------- Previous post was at 05:04 AM ----------
BTW: scroll down a bit after the Numrich page comes up- I don't know why they try to hide the individual items...
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Sorry, old bean, but as britarms is in Canada
, I thought it might help.
However, the spring book sounds interesting. My primary source for spring lore is a horribly tattered book by Wahl. Not much on the practical side, though. Catchy title something like "Spring Design and Performance", I think- the cover's about gone.
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Advisory Panel
Jmoore, if you google it, you will find it only costs 6.95 (pounds, of course!). I have mentioned this a couple of times: model engineering know-how can sometimes help with gunsmithing problems. The "Workshop Practice Series" of books provides very useful tips on various metalworking and machining techniques, foundrywork, hardening and tempering etc. and I have acquired most of them over the years. If you want to refurbish an anonymous 19th century percussion rifle, or a flintlock, then it's no use hoping to find spares - there aren't any.
Patrick
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Legacy Member
What about looking at what the local hardware store might have. You would have to buy enough to make one long enough.
john
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