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No, that question has been answered many times over.
 
Oh, you mean the actual stuff that HS5 uses? Sorry, I misunderstood. Actually, I'm not sure what that is.

I'm also not sure just how soft it is, or how it compares to the stuff we made already.
 
Yeah I meant the actual m nub. Sorbo and the others don't work as well because they expand outward when compressed vertically. M nubs actually work as soft nubs when they are confined in the hop up chamber.
As for softness, I'd guess 30a or 40a.
 
just test my accuracy CYma AKM. it seem not consitant and I have adjust the hop-up arm too much. take a part and found I file/cut off the tube patch too thin. Luckily I still have another patch. Will report again tomorrow ( night time here )
 
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Discussion starter · #112 ·
I have adjust the hop-up arm too much
I find the exact opposite on all of my R-hopped AEGs. Minute adjustments of a mm or less on my AK-74 have a huge effect downrange with .20s. Less so with .25s, but it's still a bit of a bugger for me to tune my hopup the way I like it prior to a game. Though, once I get it, it's all gravy from there on.
 
after tinker with tube patch , it work fine for now. have to adjust one by one milimet xD. I will try to order H-nub for compare what is best
 
Anyone come up with a good method of cutting the tube, or tried my tinkercad model?

I haven't gotten around to trying anything because I haven't had much time, but I recently got access to a 3d printer I can try stuff on (not too much though because it's not mine). Otherwise, I'll see if I can get some 6mm OD and 9mm ID tube to try TheTJ's method. I'm making a 12mm patch, so cutting straight down is incredibly impractical.
 
This is a strange idea, but if you know exactly what size and shape you need your patch, could you possibly make a square shaped "slicer"?

Slice the tube from belly to throat, press it down flat on a surface and then use your slicer like a sort of "cookie cutter"?

I only ask because you'd be able to cut 100s of patches in an hour that way.
 
I'm not sure what you mean, though it may just be because I suck at visualizing things from explanations.

I emailed HS5 a while ago about how he cuts his, but he hasn't responded. I made it clear that if it was a trade secret, that's fine, but I haven't heard anything yet.
 
So you'd be cutting from the side of the tubing and have the cutter cut out the rectangular shape of the patch?
 
You've got a cylinder of tubing.
Cut it length-ways and open it out to make a large rectangular surface. It'll want to bounce back to being a cylinder shape due to the memory of the plastic, but just flatten it against a surface and hold it there.
Use a cookie-cutter style slicer to cut your smaller rectangle from the tubing?

In my mind, this would work, but I don't have the ability to make a small cookie-cutter.
 
I see what you mean now.

Actually, if you cut one side and unroll it, you could just take a straight straight razor, and make straight long cuts to make a straight patch, like one side of the cookie cutter.
 
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