I’m not sure I’m buying what you’re selling.it has nothing o do with reamer life.
it is all about putting the bullet at the lands inline with the bore AT THAT POINT.
I’m not sure I’m buying what you’re selling.it has nothing o do with reamer life.
it is all about putting the bullet at the lands inline with the bore AT THAT POINT.
I’m not sure I’m buying what you’re selling.
But that has nothing to do with pre boring, unless I suppose you’re trying to use a short stem indicator.He's talking about (I think) the "gritters" method of indicating and dialing the throat vs both ends of the barrel. I think.
What if you don't have a flush system? I would think that pre boring would would result in a better finish, due to less of a chip load, vs just using the reamer start to finish.
I’m personally pretty fresh to chambering, but pre-boring seems to be more work and more risk. I don’t find using the finish reamer the whole way to be that troubling. I’d rather send a reamer off to get resharpened after 15-20 barrels than deal with pre-boring even if it means doubling or tripling reamer life.
potential failure of boring???Ill keep on reaming. Never cost me any time over setup and potential failure of boring.
And I clearly said "I'm good"not, i clearly said look up jackie schmidt method
C’mon! He said he “thought” you were talking about the gritters method. Why not just say you weren’t and expand on what you were talking about?so why post a LIE that i am talking gordy gritters method???
Going too far and having to start overpotential failure of boring???
You can measure.Going too far and having to start over
I wouldn't say I know little about basic machining practice. I'm a machinist by trade and work for Pierce Engineering. In standard machining practice, you use a drill .010-.015 under the reamer size. I understand that, chambering seems to be some guys prebore and some guys don't. I don't understand why you chose to call me out when I said nothing negative about pre-drill/boring. I am not a chambering expert, and I noted that in my post. I simply said using just the reamer seems to be simpler and works for me. I never said drilling and boring was any less or more precise.Honestly you know little about basic machining practice. As you progress through your learning curve you may then understand why drill, prebore and ream gives you a more precise job.
That’s my take, you can really hog out some material fast, straighten it up a bit with a boring bar fairly fast then the reamer has an easy job and nice path to bring the hole or chamber to it’s final dimension.Drills are for drilling.reamers are for reaming-not drilling.any form of reaming is better with a pre bored hole with minimal material left for the reamer to remove.dont take this wrong way guys I'm not telling anyone how to chamber a barrel and not saying anyone is doing it wrong..people do things differently and do what makes you happy.just my take on reaming.
Thanks Gary.so I'm not saying that any other method is wrong but to answer the question: pre-drilling and boring the chamber body section has nothing to do with tool life or time (though it is faster) what we are trying to do is eliminate the influence of bore curvature on the path of the reamer which manifest itself as chamber runout and/or an oversize chamber, all barrels exhibit some degree of bore curvature, which is best visualized as a minute "corkscrew" path left by the drilling operation, because of this we can only pick two spots in that bore that can be zeroed for runout, regardless of where those two spots are, the rest of the bore will "wobble" to some degree, creating a section of bore that is true zero runout for the reamer is the best way to achieve a straight and accurately sized chamber in my experience