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This is a difficult situation, and will require a lot of patience and dedication on your part.
First off, I recommend moving them to neutral territory before interacting with them. If possible, set up a room with a couple of T-stand perches at a little lower than your chest level, and when you're going to work with the birds, move them to the T-stand first. Birds are usually more attentive and well-behaved when they aren't in their own territory.
Do you know anyone with a tame bird who you can use as a model? If so, let them watch you interact with the model bird, Show them that when the model lets you touch him/her, he/she gets a treat.
Unfortunately, you are going to have to be bitten a few times *and not react* to get them to stop biting. They have to learn that biting doesn't work anymore: they can't make you go away by biting, and they can't make you make predictible funny ouch-sounds and flail around. Approach them confidently when you have them on the T-stands. You need to work on getting closer and closer without fear, ignoring the lunging and not reacting to bites.
The book My Parrot, My Friend has a lot of good information on taming unsocialized parrots; another good resource is Sally Blanchard's The Beak Book. If you need real-life assistance, there may be someone near you with experience--ask your avian vet, ask the people at the local parrot stores, etc. Good luck!
Tucker
Tucker
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