recuperator assembly
recuperator assembly
can anyone explain to me how and where the recuperator is installed in this gun? I for the life of me cannot figure it out and cannot find a picture of it. Thanks.... Shawn
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after a round has been fired and the barrel and bolt recoil together , they are separated by the trunnion . the bolt continues rearward but the barrel gets pushed forward by the recuperator.1919gunner wrote: What exactly does the recuperator do (purpose?)
this is a pic of a mg 3 recuperator , notice the "tail" on the end.
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Well,I think I've figured out how the front of the recuperator is mounted to the receiver.For lack of a better word ,a small machined L-shaped bolt goes into front slot in the recuperator were it catches against the plunger. When the recuperator is put in the receiver,the bolt sticks out through an approx. 3/16'' hole drilled in the side of the receiver.It's fastened with a small nut.I didn't get rear mounting hardware with my recuperator.Somebody please let me know if I'm wrong.
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the recuperator. . .
The barrel and bolt recoil together for about 8 millimeters, then the bolt rollers hit the cams, forcing them inwards. While the initial 8mm of recoil is occurring, the recuiperator is being compressed by the barrel extension. As soon as the bolt rollers are shoved toward the center, the bolt unlocks from the barrel extension and the recuperator pushes the barrel forward. The bolt continues rearward, extracting, ejecting, stripping the next shot from the belt, operating the belt lever, and loading and locking to the barrel, ready to fire again.
The recuperator is held by small bolts to the lower left side of the receiver, with the spring loaded knob toward the front. Screws should be peened over to prevent self-loosening.... or use locktite.
May I suggest a manual that would help understand the sequence of operation of the MG42? H.Dv. 216/6 is an origiinal German manual translated to English that has many graphics and an excellent description of how the MG42 works. It will answer some of your questions about which parts do what, and explain the recoiling of the barrel, how the booster works, and what each part does. It also includes exploded diagrams of all parts.
See http://www.GermanManuals.com for details.
The recuperator is held by small bolts to the lower left side of the receiver, with the spring loaded knob toward the front. Screws should be peened over to prevent self-loosening.... or use locktite.
May I suggest a manual that would help understand the sequence of operation of the MG42? H.Dv. 216/6 is an origiinal German manual translated to English that has many graphics and an excellent description of how the MG42 works. It will answer some of your questions about which parts do what, and explain the recoiling of the barrel, how the booster works, and what each part does. It also includes exploded diagrams of all parts.
See http://www.GermanManuals.com for details.
Jbaum - good explaination.
AS2222 :
You're right. The L-shaped screw goes up front with the leg of the "L" facing aft in the recuperator slot. The leg can fit either direction - with the leg facing fwd or facing aft. Put it in with the leg facing towards the rear.
The rear bolt is a 5mm speciality bolt with shoulders cut such that the slot in the recuperator retains the bolt head from turning while the nut is being torqued. As I recall a 8-32 x 1/2 english machine screw will work just fine in it's place. The rear recuperator screw only keeps the recuperator down in the reciever. All of the shear of the recuperator is taken by the L-shaped bracket (not to be confused with the L shaped screw in the front of the recuperator) riveted to the receiver just to the rear of the recuperator
AS2222 :
You're right. The L-shaped screw goes up front with the leg of the "L" facing aft in the recuperator slot. The leg can fit either direction - with the leg facing fwd or facing aft. Put it in with the leg facing towards the rear.
The rear bolt is a 5mm speciality bolt with shoulders cut such that the slot in the recuperator retains the bolt head from turning while the nut is being torqued. As I recall a 8-32 x 1/2 english machine screw will work just fine in it's place. The rear recuperator screw only keeps the recuperator down in the reciever. All of the shear of the recuperator is taken by the L-shaped bracket (not to be confused with the L shaped screw in the front of the recuperator) riveted to the receiver just to the rear of the recuperator
Last edited by Otis Cambell on Wed Mar 23, 2005 11:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Recuperator
One thing to remember, don't weld the recuperator assembly to the receiver! Use the special bolt only.
Get in touch with John Baum and order some of his excellent translations of the original manuals, they will help with many of your questions. Plus they are great reading too.
Get in touch with John Baum and order some of his excellent translations of the original manuals, they will help with many of your questions. Plus they are great reading too.
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click the link
Full descriptions (and prices) for each of the 10 or so MG42/MG3 manuals I've translated to English can be read at:
http://www.GermanManuals.com/manuals.html
thanks for your interest,
John
http://www.GermanManuals.com/manuals.html
thanks for your interest,
John