bobm
Silver $$ Contributor
My sample tool arrived this morning and got tested just now. I just plugged it in and it worked right away. It comes packaged in a cardboard tube with three extra mirror assemblies. I have a problem with the three mirrors fitting, though. They will not screw on the scope camera body, too tight.
The mirror from my flexible shaft unit fits good, and the three new ones fit the flexible tool good. I will let Teslong know of possible thread fit issues. I had no metric die that size to chase the body threads.
The tube looks to be stainless steel with a solid aluminum handle. There is ample flex cord to rotate the tool with no binding. The stop plug is a soft plastic material that slides and stays in place with a friction fit.
The first test is with my first .22 rifle as a youth. I got a fantastic birthday present in 1964. I had just received firearm safety certification from the Boy Scouts training program that fall. My parents bought me a brand new Marlin model 80. micro groove, 8 shot mag fed, with a walnut stock a couple of months later. No SN required on .22's back then. Dad said it cost him about $40.00 from a Western Auto store.
No telling how many rounds this rifle has fired. It presently wears a Leupold 4x compact scope.
This bore must be typical of a mass produced economy .22 of the day. It has a really crude bore and chamber with lots of tool marking. It shoots like a dream with WW hi speed Super-X solids.
ANY AND ALL PLEASE FEEL FREE TO ADD YOUR PICTURES AND POSTS TO THIS THREAD

The mirror from my flexible shaft unit fits good, and the three new ones fit the flexible tool good. I will let Teslong know of possible thread fit issues. I had no metric die that size to chase the body threads.
The tube looks to be stainless steel with a solid aluminum handle. There is ample flex cord to rotate the tool with no binding. The stop plug is a soft plastic material that slides and stays in place with a friction fit.
The first test is with my first .22 rifle as a youth. I got a fantastic birthday present in 1964. I had just received firearm safety certification from the Boy Scouts training program that fall. My parents bought me a brand new Marlin model 80. micro groove, 8 shot mag fed, with a walnut stock a couple of months later. No SN required on .22's back then. Dad said it cost him about $40.00 from a Western Auto store.
No telling how many rounds this rifle has fired. It presently wears a Leupold 4x compact scope.
This bore must be typical of a mass produced economy .22 of the day. It has a really crude bore and chamber with lots of tool marking. It shoots like a dream with WW hi speed Super-X solids.
ANY AND ALL PLEASE FEEL FREE TO ADD YOUR PICTURES AND POSTS TO THIS THREAD






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