- Joined
- Oct 22, 2014
- Messages
- 12,758
I live on the Oregon Coast too, I figure the rust is an extra thread locker protection![]()
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It’s the best. I actually used to (20+ years ago) purposely try to get ring screws to rust for that very reason.
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I live on the Oregon Coast too, I figure the rust is an extra thread locker protection![]()
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Yeah I thread locked them as per recommendations from all you guysNot if you thread lock them as you should.
Their website still says that all hardware is nitrided to prevent unsightly rustThey’re steel screws that aren’t nitrided anymore for good reason, and degreased from the factory. Which means they like almost 100% of ring screws on the market, will get surface rust.
I know and in theory it works but in application, most hardware I have used that is nitrided will still rust the same. The best thing to do, is replace hardware with titanium or use some mineral oil in the threads and on the outside.Their website still says that all hardware is nitrided to prevent unsightly rust
Wouldn’t mineral oil in threads reduce the ability for it to lock the scope up tight?I know and in theory it works but in application, most hardware I have used that is nitrided will still rust the same. The best thing to do, is replace hardware with titanium or use some mineral oil in the threads and on the outside.
I haven't ran into this issue if proper torque is applied.Wouldn’t mineral oil in threads reduce the ability for it to lock the scope up tight?
I completely forgot about the nail polishI used to worry about this with my bow. I even payed for a titanium bolt upgrade. Having been down that path, I wouldn’t do it again. Sealing the screw heads with nail polish has been enough
That was posted for Form. He posted that the hardware is not nitrided.I know and in theory it works but in application, most hardware I have used that is nitrided will still rust the same. The best thing to do, is replace hardware with titanium or use some mineral oil in the threads and on the outside.
Understandable, but Unknown Munitions should probably remove that from their description.It was discovered that the Nitride process was detrimental to the strength of the bolts. Rendering them weaker than a standard bolt. The overall torque caused the bolts to potentially break. It was a learning process.
Ken