Took a break off to do some fiddle phucking and it took a LOT of heat and when it was off there was “white stuff” almost like plumbers putty.
I want to put it back on and I want to do it the correct way.
After some reading it seems Rocksett is the way to go.
So the question is:
Where can a guy find rocksett locally?
Secondly, does it store well or is it a one a done kind of material?
Rocksett Question
-
- ArizonaShooting.org Member
- Posts: 2404
- Joined: May 15th, 2018, 8:36 pm
- Reputation: 12
- Location: Tempe
Re: Rocksett Question
Unless you are mounting a suppressor adapter that you have no intention of taking off for the rest of time, I'd avoid using Rocksett again. You were lucky to get it off; Rocksett is designed to be hot water soluble, not heat. I have encountered properly Rocksett'd muzzle devices that had to be machined off the barrel in order to remove it.
Red Loctite offers a more than sufficient holding strength for any muzzle device.
You won't find it locally...it's an odd thing to carry because the smallest amount I've ever seen available for purchase is 2oz, and that will last you a lifetime. It can be stored for 10+ years, inside a stable environment, e.g. not in your garage.
Red Loctite offers a more than sufficient holding strength for any muzzle device.
You won't find it locally...it's an odd thing to carry because the smallest amount I've ever seen available for purchase is 2oz, and that will last you a lifetime. It can be stored for 10+ years, inside a stable environment, e.g. not in your garage.
- freefly
- ArizonaShooting.org Member
- Posts: 179
- Joined: May 1st, 2019, 4:00 pm
- Reputation: 3
- Location: Scottsdale
Re: Rocksett Question
^^^ What he said.QuietM4 wrote: ↑January 5th, 2023, 10:01 pm Unless you are mounting a suppressor adapter that you have no intention of taking off for the rest of time, I'd avoid using Rocksett again. You were lucky to get it off; Rocksett is designed to be hot water soluble, not heat. I have encountered properly Rocksett'd muzzle devices that had to be machined off the barrel in order to remove it.
Red Loctite offers a more than sufficient holding strength for any muzzle device.
You won't find it locally...it's an odd thing to carry because the smallest amount I've ever seen available for purchase is 2oz, and that will last you a lifetime. It can be stored for 10+ years, inside a stable environment, e.g. not in your garage.
Muzzle devices installed with Rocksett can be a major PITA to remove, especially if slathered on and heat-cured. Go with LocTite 263 (red) instead and you'll be fine. You don't need a lot. Cleaning everything properly/thoroughly before application is recommended.
- Doc
- ArizonaShooting.org Member
- Posts: 1855
- Joined: December 17th, 2018, 5:04 pm
- Reputation: 25
- Location: Middle of nowhere but hotter
Re: Rocksett Question
Yes, this is a suppressor adapter. I removed it to go direct thread but I’ve been able to find the correct adapter and I’d like to make the brake as permanent as possible.QuietM4 wrote: ↑January 5th, 2023, 10:01 pm Unless you are mounting a suppressor adapter that you have no intention of taking off for the rest of time, I'd avoid using Rocksett again. You were lucky to get it off; Rocksett is designed to be hot water soluble, not heat. I have encountered properly Rocksett'd muzzle devices that had to be machined off the barrel in order to remove it.
Red Loctite offers a more than sufficient holding strength for any muzzle device.
You won't find it locally...it's an odd thing to carry because the smallest amount I've ever seen available for purchase is 2oz, and that will last you a lifetime. It can be stored for 10+ years, inside a stable environment, e.g. not in your garage.
I don’t want the muzzle device leaving the barrel and getting stuck on the can.
-
- ArizonaShooting.org Member
- Posts: 2404
- Joined: May 15th, 2018, 8:36 pm
- Reputation: 12
- Location: Tempe
Re: Rocksett Question
Just stick with red loctite...it will be much easier (just heat) to remove in the future. Properly installed rocksett is basically permanent. If you were mouting a suppressor muzzle adapter to a full-auto belt fed, then maybe I'd go with rocksett...but for a semi-auto you won't be able to get the mount hot enough to worry about it spinning off the barrel.
Properly degreased barrel threads and red loctite are more than sufficient for your needs.
Properly degreased barrel threads and red loctite are more than sufficient for your needs.
- muta4warrior
- ArizonaShooting.org Member
- Posts: 289
- Joined: May 19th, 2018, 9:25 am
- Reputation: 12
- Location: East Mesa
Re: Rocksett Question
Red loctite is all I ever use for suppressor mounts and have never had one come loose.QuietM4 wrote: ↑January 6th, 2023, 10:50 am Just stick with red loctite...it will be much easier (just heat) to remove in the future. Properly installed rocksett is basically permanent. If you were mouting a suppressor muzzle adapter to a full-auto belt fed, then maybe I'd go with rocksett...but for a semi-auto you won't be able to get the mount hot enough to worry about it spinning off the barrel.
Properly degreased barrel threads and red loctite are more than sufficient for your needs.
- Doc
- ArizonaShooting.org Member
- Posts: 1855
- Joined: December 17th, 2018, 5:04 pm
- Reputation: 25
- Location: Middle of nowhere but hotter
Re: Rocksett Question
Appreciate the advice.QuietM4 wrote: ↑January 6th, 2023, 10:50 am Just stick with red loctite...it will be much easier (just heat) to remove in the future. Properly installed rocksett is basically permanent. If you were mouting a suppressor muzzle adapter to a full-auto belt fed, then maybe I'd go with rocksett...but for a semi-auto you won't be able to get the mount hot enough to worry about it spinning off the barrel.
Properly degreased barrel threads and red loctite are more than sufficient for your needs.
I’m setting it w red lock tite.
Thanks!