So, I've been hanging out in this forum for a while and have picked up some things from y'all. I have a cool new chamber flush system that has saved several hours during the reaming process. This was a great thing to copy!!!
I recently picked up an inboard spider for my lathe and thought I'd try it out this weekend. I've been out of town all week for work and could really use some down time focusing on something I normally enjoy.
Until this weekend, I have "dialed-in" using a range rod. I've had good results using that method--high master at midrange in both F-TR and F Open and several state mid-range championships and a regional championship along the way.
Like many here, I've learned from watching Gordy Gritters videos and reading his books. Bob Pastor has a few very helpful videos on chambering that show the entire process--and he's a lot of fun to talk to.
In my mind, I think the range rod gives you an average of the runout over the distance you are measuring and let's you split that in half. Unfortunately it is not very repeatable. I usually withdraw the rod, turn it 90 degrees and re-zero. I keep doing this until I get consistent results. This is probably not really changing much.
Direct indicating seems like a better approach--something y'all have been talking about lately. After installing the inboard spider, I loaded in a new barrel, got it close with the range rod and drilled it with a 3/8 drill a little more than an inch. I am chambering this barrel as a .284 and wanted the pilot to engage the lands as I only have floating reamer holders.
I put the freebore area underneath the inboard spider and dialed in with a Mitutoyo 513-504 DTI with the mid-length 1.33" contact point understanding that any deviation was a little over twice what the gauge was reading. That wasn't to hard to get to zero after cleaning the barrel with alcohol several times...
I changed to the longer 2.65" contact point and indicated on a point approximately 1.5" ahead of the freebore area. Using the outboard spiders I can get it close but every .0001 on the gauge is really .00045! I can not get the gauge to zeros in all grooves. The the best I can do is about .00005 on the gauge which is about .00023.
The Mitutoyo is a small gauge and I am using magnified headsets to make sure of the readings. I've kept both inboard and outboard spiders relatively loose trying to minimize any distortion of the area I want to indicate. I am guessing that I'd have better luck If I drilled further and used the shorter contact point. Is this about right are are y'all able to get both positions reading dead zero?
I am not so happy about copying this technique at this time...
I am glad I am not doing this for a living--my family would be very skinny!
Thank you for any feedback positive or negative,
Hank
I recently picked up an inboard spider for my lathe and thought I'd try it out this weekend. I've been out of town all week for work and could really use some down time focusing on something I normally enjoy.
Until this weekend, I have "dialed-in" using a range rod. I've had good results using that method--high master at midrange in both F-TR and F Open and several state mid-range championships and a regional championship along the way.
Like many here, I've learned from watching Gordy Gritters videos and reading his books. Bob Pastor has a few very helpful videos on chambering that show the entire process--and he's a lot of fun to talk to.
In my mind, I think the range rod gives you an average of the runout over the distance you are measuring and let's you split that in half. Unfortunately it is not very repeatable. I usually withdraw the rod, turn it 90 degrees and re-zero. I keep doing this until I get consistent results. This is probably not really changing much.
Direct indicating seems like a better approach--something y'all have been talking about lately. After installing the inboard spider, I loaded in a new barrel, got it close with the range rod and drilled it with a 3/8 drill a little more than an inch. I am chambering this barrel as a .284 and wanted the pilot to engage the lands as I only have floating reamer holders.
I put the freebore area underneath the inboard spider and dialed in with a Mitutoyo 513-504 DTI with the mid-length 1.33" contact point understanding that any deviation was a little over twice what the gauge was reading. That wasn't to hard to get to zero after cleaning the barrel with alcohol several times...
I changed to the longer 2.65" contact point and indicated on a point approximately 1.5" ahead of the freebore area. Using the outboard spiders I can get it close but every .0001 on the gauge is really .00045! I can not get the gauge to zeros in all grooves. The the best I can do is about .00005 on the gauge which is about .00023.
The Mitutoyo is a small gauge and I am using magnified headsets to make sure of the readings. I've kept both inboard and outboard spiders relatively loose trying to minimize any distortion of the area I want to indicate. I am guessing that I'd have better luck If I drilled further and used the shorter contact point. Is this about right are are y'all able to get both positions reading dead zero?
I am not so happy about copying this technique at this time...
I am glad I am not doing this for a living--my family would be very skinny!
Thank you for any feedback positive or negative,
Hank