Howdy.
I have a revolver cylinder that has been rather abused in the last 150 years of it's existence. The front sections of the cylinder chambers are nice and smooth but the rear section is horrid. Almost looks like someone has taken a twist drill in a hand held drill and reamed the rear section out cone shaped, with more material removed from one side of the bore than the other.
I'd like to bore and ream the chambers to 0.480" diameter clean through, then sleeve the bore and ream it out to .454" to accept my .452" diameter cartridges. Trouble is by reaming the chambers out to .480" I'll reduce the amount of metal between the cylinders from .050" to .028" before I install sleeves. Is 28 thou. too thin to hold a sleeve in the bore? I was thinking if I do this I will ream out and sleeve one chamber before moving to the next just to make the chamber wall stiffer before going to the next.
Any thoughts? Am I thinking ridiculously here?
I have a revolver cylinder that has been rather abused in the last 150 years of it's existence. The front sections of the cylinder chambers are nice and smooth but the rear section is horrid. Almost looks like someone has taken a twist drill in a hand held drill and reamed the rear section out cone shaped, with more material removed from one side of the bore than the other.
I'd like to bore and ream the chambers to 0.480" diameter clean through, then sleeve the bore and ream it out to .454" to accept my .452" diameter cartridges. Trouble is by reaming the chambers out to .480" I'll reduce the amount of metal between the cylinders from .050" to .028" before I install sleeves. Is 28 thou. too thin to hold a sleeve in the bore? I was thinking if I do this I will ream out and sleeve one chamber before moving to the next just to make the chamber wall stiffer before going to the next.
Any thoughts? Am I thinking ridiculously here?