The M1911 Pistols Organization Forums Site - Loose Grips...
Home
Welcome to M1911.ORG
The M1911 Pistols Organization Forums Site
Contact Us Mission Statement Forum Rules Moderator Rules Legal HelpDesk Our Guestbook Donations

Go Back   The M1911 Pistols Organization Forums Site > The Parts Bin > Parts - Grips
User Name
Password
Register Activate FAQ Members List Calendar Mark Forums Read

You may now order your M1911.ORG 2010 Calendar, here.

Have you checked the M1911.ORG E-zine lately? Click here to visit it.
Reviews of the latest M1911 models and much more.


Have you registered in our Gun-Politics.ORG site?

Sponsors Panel




 
This is an old thread. You can't post a reply in it. It is left here for historical reasons.Why don't you create a new thread instead?
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1   Quote post in private message Quote post in an email
United States  Old 27th February 2005, 12:52
Tom's Avatar
Tom Tom is offline
Moderator
Mentor
 
User ID: 2503
Join Date: 6th February 2005
Location: Northern Alabama
Posts: 9,595 
  Send a message via MSN to Tom Send a message via Yahoo to Tom
Loose Grips...

Sink Ships.

Okay, I couldn't resist the play-on-words on that classic WWII slogan. But I do have an issue regarding loose grips that I'd like to pose to everyone.

Is a little bit of play in grips normal? The grips on my 1911 have just the slightest bit of play. I'm talking a small fraction of inch, mostly at the bottom. I only notice it when handling the gun for cleaning or other non-firing activities. It hasn't affected my shooting the gun at all.

I figure with all the different 1911 manufacturers out there, along with all the places that make custom grips, that some grips will fit some guns better than others, so it would seem obvious that some grips will have a little bit of play in them.

I was thinking that I need either a small rubber washer to fit down into the grip holes to give the screws something to take up the slack, or trace and cut out a thin piece of material to slip under the grips.

Am I being silly?


Tom
__________________
"I calculated the odds of this succeeding versus the odds I was doing something incredibly stupid, and ... I went ahead anyway." - Crow T. Robot
Tom - Resident Computer Geek
Have a computer or Forum question? Visit our very own M1911.ORG Help Desk and ask!
  #2   Quote post in private message Quote post in an email
United States  Old 28th February 2005, 18:14
stumbler stumbler is offline
Old Timer
 
User ID: 214
Join Date: 1st June 2004
Location: Lower Alabama, Florida
Posts: 622 
Quote:
Originally Posted by IslandersFan
I was thinking that I need either a small rubber washer to fit down into the grip holes to give the screws something to take up the slack...

Am I being silly?


Tom


Try it. It has been done before. And no, you are not being silly.

  #3   Quote post in private message Quote post in an email
United States  Old 28th February 2005, 18:47
Tom's Avatar
Tom Tom is offline
Moderator
Mentor
 
User ID: 2503
Join Date: 6th February 2005
Location: Northern Alabama
Posts: 9,595 
  Send a message via MSN to Tom Send a message via Yahoo to Tom
Guess I'll be making a trip to Home Depot to see if I can find some washers of the right size and material. I'll let you know how it goes.


Tom
__________________
"I calculated the odds of this succeeding versus the odds I was doing something incredibly stupid, and ... I went ahead anyway." - Crow T. Robot
Tom - Resident Computer Geek
Have a computer or Forum question? Visit our very own M1911.ORG Help Desk and ask!
  #4   Quote post in private message Quote post in an email
United States  Old 5th March 2005, 01:23
sabalo's Avatar
sabalo sabalo is offline
Junior Member
 
User ID: 846
Join Date: 25th August 2004
Location: Newark, Ohio
Posts: 16 
Wink
Grip Slip

A little non-permanent locktite or a dab of clear nail polish will work too.
Sabalo

  #5   Quote post in private message Quote post in an email
Greece  Old 5th March 2005, 04:48
John's Avatar
John John is offline
El Commandante
 
User ID: 1
Join Date: 29th May 2004
Location: Athens, Greece, Earth
Posts: 23,027 
  Send a message via MSN to John
Quote:
Originally Posted by sabalo
A little non-permanent locktite or a dab of clear nail polish will work too.
Sabalo

No Locatite there, I'll reveal you a secret. Use some small rubber o-rings. I learned that from the pros (Alumagrips).

Rgds
__________________
John Caradimas SV1CEC
The M1911 Pistols Organization
http://www.m1911.org
  #6   Quote post in private message Quote post in an email
United States  Old 5th March 2005, 11:42
Tom's Avatar
Tom Tom is offline
Moderator
Mentor
 
User ID: 2503
Join Date: 6th February 2005
Location: Northern Alabama
Posts: 9,595 
  Send a message via MSN to Tom Send a message via Yahoo to Tom
I don't see how Loctite or nail polish would help anyway. It's not the screws that are loose, it's the grips themselves. Now if it were the screws I could see using the Loctite - I use it when working on my cars. But the screws are fine. There's just not enough "bite" to hold the grips tight against the frame.

I'll go with the O-ring solution. I just need to get to Home Depot and do it.


Tom
__________________
"I calculated the odds of this succeeding versus the odds I was doing something incredibly stupid, and ... I went ahead anyway." - Crow T. Robot
Tom - Resident Computer Geek
Have a computer or Forum question? Visit our very own M1911.ORG Help Desk and ask!
  #7   Quote post in private message Quote post in an email
United States  Old 7th March 2005, 11:35
Tom's Avatar
Tom Tom is offline
Moderator
Mentor
 
User ID: 2503
Join Date: 6th February 2005
Location: Northern Alabama
Posts: 9,595 
  Send a message via MSN to Tom Send a message via Yahoo to Tom
Quote:
Originally Posted by John
No Locatite there, I'll reveal you a secret. Use some small rubber o-rings. I learned that from the pros (Alumagrips).

Rgds


Home Depot. #36 O-Rings. They measure 5/16" (OD) x 3/16" (ID) x 1/16" (thickness). I wish the OD was slightly smaller (1/4"), but they fit fairly well inside the screw holes of the grips, and when I tightened the screws the grips were 100% secure - and the screws do not protrude much beyond the surface of the grips either.

Can't wait to take it out to the range again and see if it makes a difference.


Tom
__________________
"I calculated the odds of this succeeding versus the odds I was doing something incredibly stupid, and ... I went ahead anyway." - Crow T. Robot
Tom - Resident Computer Geek
Have a computer or Forum question? Visit our very own M1911.ORG Help Desk and ask!
  #8   Quote post in private message Quote post in an email
Old 9th March 2005, 20:55
Sifu Sifu is offline
Old Timer
 
User ID: 2895
Join Date: 3rd March 2005
Posts: 372 
 
I use the Home Depot Orings too. They work great. I was in HD looking for washers one day and stumbled upon the orings when the idea light flashed on. Been using them ever since.

  #9   Quote post in private message Quote post in an email
United States  Old 3rd May 2006, 18:15
Bosko's Avatar
Bosko Bosko is offline
Old Timer
 
User ID: 6149
Join Date: 28th October 2005
Location: Pilot Mountain, NC
Posts: 352 
Loose grip screw bushing

Sorry to dredge up this old thread. I have tried several Search inquiries but I cannot seem to come up with an answer specific to my problem. It is embarassing to ask because I know I have seen the answer somewhere before. All the hex grip screws on the grips of my Kimber Eclipse Custom II were shooting loose after about 50 rounds. I applied #242 blue loctite to all four screws. Today, one screw on each grip started to loosen and the grips started to move in my hand. On one screw, I applied loctite again. On the other, I found that the bushing had come loose again. Is there a specific loctite (model number/color) that I should use on this loose busing? I will try the o-rings but I feel that I should set the loose bushing first.

  #10   Quote post in private message Quote post in an email
United States  Old 3rd May 2006, 18:35
Tom's Avatar
Tom Tom is offline
Moderator
Mentor
 
User ID: 2503
Join Date: 6th February 2005
Location: Northern Alabama
Posts: 9,595 
  Send a message via MSN to Tom Send a message via Yahoo to Tom
Nothing wrong with dredging up old threads, so I was surprised to see this was MY thread back when I was still a newbie (long before I became a Moderator of this wonderful site). But enough of the sales pitch ...

I don't think the O-rings will solve your problem. I used them because the screw-to-grip fit was a little lacking, and the rubber O-rings helped take up the slack. But I never had a problem with the screws themselves or the bushing coming loose.

I would hesitate to suggest the red (permanent) Loctite because that is a bit more ... permanent. And you want to be able to undo the grip screws for cleaning, etc. Maybe the red for the bushings (escutcheons as Springfield incorrectly calls them, by the way) since those generally never removed from the frame. But I wouldn't use them on the grip screws themselves.

I'd make sure that the surfaces of both the grip screws and the threads inside the bushings are free from any oils and other materials and try the blue Loctite again. Maybe there was something already on the thread surfaces that didn't allow the Loctite to work as it should.
__________________
"I calculated the odds of this succeeding versus the odds I was doing something incredibly stupid, and ... I went ahead anyway." - Crow T. Robot
Tom - Resident Computer Geek
Have a computer or Forum question? Visit our very own M1911.ORG Help Desk and ask!
 



Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump



Have you checked the M1911.ORG E-zine lately? Click here to visit it.
Reviews of the latest M1911 models and much more.

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 18:27.

Page generated in 0.11822 seconds (93.72% PHP - 6.28% MySQL) with 13 queries

Copyright © John Caradimas 1994-present
The M1911 Pistols Organization
Site hosted by Worldband Com

Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.