Petey
Gold $$ Contributor
Maybe this has been covered before but educate me a little.
I have a BAT MB multi-flat and have owned several barrels that were chambered and threaded by smiths to fit. I understand how they headspace during reaming of that barrel for that action, but here's my question.
How is it that I can take a barrel that was threaded and chambered with proper headspace on another BAT action with the same threads and tpi and ensure the headspace is correct on my gun?
Is BAT's tolerances that good?
The only way I think this would work is if all their actions have the same exact distance from the front of the action to the front of the bolt face. Is this the magic answer?
I never counted threads on all my barrels but I would believe they all would match up.
I guess my question is, if my buddy has a BAT B and he took his barrel off and I screwed it on my BAT MB, how is it possible the headspace is correct?
Sorry if the question seems silly or simple but I has me pondering how things work in your world of gun smithing
I have a BAT MB multi-flat and have owned several barrels that were chambered and threaded by smiths to fit. I understand how they headspace during reaming of that barrel for that action, but here's my question.
How is it that I can take a barrel that was threaded and chambered with proper headspace on another BAT action with the same threads and tpi and ensure the headspace is correct on my gun?
Is BAT's tolerances that good?
The only way I think this would work is if all their actions have the same exact distance from the front of the action to the front of the bolt face. Is this the magic answer?
I never counted threads on all my barrels but I would believe they all would match up.
I guess my question is, if my buddy has a BAT B and he took his barrel off and I screwed it on my BAT MB, how is it possible the headspace is correct?
Sorry if the question seems silly or simple but I has me pondering how things work in your world of gun smithing