On the 1440, you can use the chip pan as your drain pan. I think you'd need 10 gallons of fluid, because it drains slow
Nah, My chip pan is a war zone of gunk. I don't want the chamber fluid running through that.
Here you go Blaine. Shorter hex screws to give you more room for a combination rod that is used for anti rotation of the union and a place to mount the dial indicator when dialing in that barrel.
Think real hard about putting an anti rotation pin on your union. Takes the stress off the oil hose,
Note the short set screws used for holding the muzzle and the lock nuts. The lock nuts are called Pal Nuts and are used as lock nuts on connecting rod bolts/nuts on small block chevys of the old days. I have a selection of various lengths of set screws for different barrel diameters.
Another advantage of using short set screws is you will not snag your shirt sleeve when the lathe is running!!!!
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Your pump looks like mine. Mine is a centrifugal. I put a ball valve on the discharge side of the pump for regulating flow.
Here the valve is about 1/4 open.
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Not related to the flush system, but if you are leaning over the lathe while operating you may consider raising the lathe. Below is mine with 4 inch channel iron raising blocks that I made. Note the shims I used when aligning the lathe bed. The channel is welded to steel plate that spans the legs of the channel.
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I guess this photo is flush related. Look close and you can see the ball valve on the pump discharge.
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I like a switch for the pump instead of closing off the pump flow with a valve when withdrawing the reamer. Running the pump against a closed valve will overheat the pump motor.
Switch on the shelf above and behind the lathe.
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Oetiker clampsFor those following along at home... If you're using a high-pressure system, you might want to use "Cinch" clamps. I personally never had luck with small screw clamps.
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A lot will depend on the cartridge and your prebore method.Can I push the reamer to with in .100" of finish depth in one stroke?
A byproduct of my design is that it seals tighter on small bores. It's the large one's I watch.
I'm going to check that Astro Swiss out.
After years of my flush system parts sitting in a box I am finally making time to assemble it after reading this thread. Every time I chamber a barrel I swear it would be the last one with peck and clean method. I have a Dayton gear pump, pressure relief valve, all the ball valves, 10 micron Napa diesel filter and a Deublin 1105 rotary union, Hydraulic tank and a cart built up to mount it all. I have 5 gallons of Vipers Venom laying around but am going to try the suggestion mentioned here of using Astro Swiss HD MV. I'm looking forward to saving time so my question is how much will this change my pecking cycle. I plan on a constant 60 psi. Can I push the reamer to with in .100" of finish depth in one stroke? I have a Prototrak 1630 lathe and program the threads and C'bore already. Should I try to program a rough out operation for the chamber as well?
Dont ever let anybody rush you. If they see you do it faster, theyll expect it faster when youre having issuesThe way real machinists vs self taught guys like me do things will probably drive how you chamber with your flush.
Without a flush, it took me a long time to chamber a barrel. I would go about .030", back it out, clean chips off the reamer, clean chips out the chamber, and repeat.
With the flush, I still go in and back out. I go in .100" at a time until I get the shoulder in, then around .050" a pass until I am close. Because I am paranoid about scratching a chamber I don't make one long pass.
The nice thing about the flush is when I have the reamer backed out so the shoulder area is clear of the barrel, the flush usually washes off all the chips. So this process is much faster.
Now I don't have my reamer screws cut for coolant--I am crappy at precision freehand stuff. I am also not drilling and free boring. I think most guys do both, but I am very happy with the final results I am getting doing it my way--occasionally shooting IBS screamer groups at 1000 yds.
It usually takes me 10-15 minutes to get most of the chamber cut this way. The whole chambering process usually takes me 45 min to an hour, because of all the checking I do. I stop after the shoulder starts cutting, remove the flush, run a patch on a rod 2-3 times to push out the fluid, then look with a borescope. If everything looks good I'll go to within .250" of final and look again. Once I get within .030" I check with a feeler gage against the shoulder of the action. If I don't have an action I measure with a depth gauge for the final cut.
The reason for my non-production approach is I have never had and machinist training, and I am very slow to trust cutting to measurements, am concerned about scratching a chamber, etc., and I am not willing to sacrifice precision for speed. Real machinists can be both fast and precise.
Dont ever let anybody rush you. If they see you do it faster, theyll expect it faster when youre having issues