D
Deleted member 408
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Gentlemen.....
Today I was gonna go into the where and hows of this ubiquitous cheap and nasty Chinese multi identity air rifle that seems to have malingered behind so many barn doors, damp garage corners and on occasion, at the bottom of a canal or two...
Only recently a fellow Forum member (@Aristotle ) went into great depths of how to work on this rifle with half decent results too (so well done).
However, as per the title of ths thread, the specific model is the BAM (or SMK, or Lion, or Westlake) B3 - Y.... that were looking at...
The model Y..... I hear you mumble???? some may not be aware of that particular model..... well happen not..
This is the model designation that I gave this project after I obtained the rifle off @Oldfart a little while ago. Wanting a project to while away the hours during the short cold days of winter.
Now, I am fully aware that so many of you fine chaps have works on the B3 and its well documented on the Forum, but, if you would indulge me to give you MY slant on working with these pieces of agricultural machinery cast offs, it would be appreciated.
May I also ask respectfully (as per my other Todays Tinkering threads), that no comments are made to break the lineage of the thread as each section will be covered seperately.. Once everything has been finished, please comment to you hearts content (good, bad or indifferent).
So.. this all started late October when I received the rifle... in tact, well packed and in the condition it was advertised.... (photos taken from the Sales section advert for the rifle)..

It must have taken me all of 15 minutes from receipt of the package to have everything stripped, looked at, laid out and the first inclinations of "WHY"!!!!!!
I pondered the parts of pressed steel, sharp edges, slots that had been bitten out and not machined and worse still... "WHY is the barrel not in line".... "WHY has the piston seal crumbled", "WHY is there glue all over the compression tube and breech seal....????
So many questions... you can now start to see why I called it the B3 WHY!!!!!!
Here are just a few images of what was found whe the rifle was apart (and in no particular order) .. I shall go into specific details later in the post..















Right... now you see what sort of stuff were looking at.... lets delve deeper into the chasm of "WHY"!!!!!!
In the next post, I shall start on the specifics... (please dont comment just yet)...
Today I was gonna go into the where and hows of this ubiquitous cheap and nasty Chinese multi identity air rifle that seems to have malingered behind so many barn doors, damp garage corners and on occasion, at the bottom of a canal or two...
Only recently a fellow Forum member (@Aristotle ) went into great depths of how to work on this rifle with half decent results too (so well done).
However, as per the title of ths thread, the specific model is the BAM (or SMK, or Lion, or Westlake) B3 - Y.... that were looking at...
The model Y..... I hear you mumble???? some may not be aware of that particular model..... well happen not..
This is the model designation that I gave this project after I obtained the rifle off @Oldfart a little while ago. Wanting a project to while away the hours during the short cold days of winter.
Now, I am fully aware that so many of you fine chaps have works on the B3 and its well documented on the Forum, but, if you would indulge me to give you MY slant on working with these pieces of agricultural machinery cast offs, it would be appreciated.
May I also ask respectfully (as per my other Todays Tinkering threads), that no comments are made to break the lineage of the thread as each section will be covered seperately.. Once everything has been finished, please comment to you hearts content (good, bad or indifferent).
So.. this all started late October when I received the rifle... in tact, well packed and in the condition it was advertised.... (photos taken from the Sales section advert for the rifle)..

It must have taken me all of 15 minutes from receipt of the package to have everything stripped, looked at, laid out and the first inclinations of "WHY"!!!!!!
I pondered the parts of pressed steel, sharp edges, slots that had been bitten out and not machined and worse still... "WHY is the barrel not in line".... "WHY has the piston seal crumbled", "WHY is there glue all over the compression tube and breech seal....????
So many questions... you can now start to see why I called it the B3 WHY!!!!!!
Here are just a few images of what was found whe the rifle was apart (and in no particular order) .. I shall go into specific details later in the post..















Right... now you see what sort of stuff were looking at.... lets delve deeper into the chasm of "WHY"!!!!!!
In the next post, I shall start on the specifics... (please dont comment just yet)...







































