i may in the future. to be honest i hate writing about zoom lenses so that may have to wait. i just hate using them for some reasons much less writing about them. its like talking about an ex girlfriend and detailing your experiences together
this lens is a bit more complicated as it has 2 sets of helicoids. one for the macro mode and the usual one. if you got the macro one wrong then your screwed, pun intended
did you read my work on working with screws?
Indeed I had read that page, as all the other ones on repair fundamentals. In hindsight, what tripped me up was Nikon's use of soft aluminum for this part of the lens, which I had not suspected. I'm accustomed to the brass structural components in almost every other Ai/Ai-S lens. While reassembling the lens after the first shimming attempt, I tightened the screws with the same amount of force I usually use, which the brass screw holes of other lenses can easily withstand. But this aluminum screw hole got stripped. (The steel screw is fine.) It was only afterwards that I realized what material it was made of.
As I believe you noted, this particular lens uses a plastic aperture ring, like a Series E lens. Nikon also used aluminum in the barrels of at least some Series E lenses. The presence of these lower-cost materials in the 28-85mm Ai-S—the outer focusing barrel is also aluminum—makes me wonder if Nikon had originally designed the lens as a Series E one, but then changed the branding once they had decided to scrap the whole line, rather than cancel a lens that was perhaps already close to production-ready. If that's true, I'm glad they decided to release the lens after a quick rebranding, because it suits me just fine.
Oh, I went back at the lens tonight and it took about a minute to realize that the part into which the bayonet screws screw is a fairly minor part of the barrel, one that is easily detached from the rest of the barrel. (It is the part that includes the silver grab ring.) Having found that out, I decided to order the "parts only" lens from KEH, which I'll cannibalize for the aluminum piece with the stripped hole and the small, broken plastic piece. I just hope my next attempt at shimming the lens is successful.