Lee in Texas
Gold $$ Contributor
I’m thinking of having that done on a floorplate for a future build.
Thanks. Lee
Thanks. Lee
Feel free to share the thread.Floorplates are cool and all but i need a mill scraped
Sounds cool. I had considered the same thing, but I would want a fixture to hold the bottom metal steady in a vise. Is something like that commercially available?Reminds me of a stone washed surface, done with large ceramic media. True scraping is an art! But, you've inspired me to make some scraping tools for purely cosmetic purposes. It's been a long time since I've looked into it. I have an extra 1903 floor plate sitting around I can practice on.
My 1917 I had the bolt, extractor and magazine follower jeweled, and I also really like the esthetics of it. Thanks for the renewed interest!
Sounds exactly what I experienced...we did spherical bearing hsgs.Fairbanks-Morse products.New production manager stopped it.We started getting NEW equipment (750000.00$) back with burnt up bearings.Did some scrape work in the USN...I still do aluminum bedding blocks to actions...you,d be surprised on how poorly they mate.Nowadays most folks kant tell layout bluing from Prussian bluing...Those are called flakeing marks. Those are the little marks you put in the metal to hold the little pockets of oil between the 2 pieces that slide against each other. The tool in like a long flat 1/4 inch thick file with a rounded end. You hold the handle under your chin with the rounded end at a slight angle away from you on the metal you want to flake. Then you use the palm of your hand and hit the tool near the bottom with little taps and you put those marks in it.
One of the first jobs I had as a Machine Repairman Apprentice was helping the senior repairman scrape and flake ways on some mills that they were rebuilding. A long boring job for an 18yr. o;d with lotts of energy.
Tarey
Brings back old memories.
Oooh, ooh, I know the difference! Prussian Blue is the work of the Devil -like never seize, once you open the tube, it gets EVERYWHERE!Sounds exactly what I experienced...we did spherical bearing hsgs.Fairbanks-Morse products.New production manager stopped it.We started getting NEW equipment (750000.00$) back with burnt up bearings.Did some scrape work in the USN...I still do aluminum bedding blocks to actions...you,d be surprised on how poorly they mate.Nowadays most folks kant tell layout bluing from Prussian bluing...
I have done a lot of it over the years, it is a lost art. Still have all the scraping tools.I can and do scraping, not as often as I use to. It is a lost art. I prefer to use a power scraper, doing it by hand sucks.
Imo the real art is being able to the final frosting and flaking by hand
I’m thinking of having that done on a floorplate for a future build.
Thanks. Lee
www.hobby-machinist.com
I was watching a guy scrap on the tube the other day he said 32 or 42 specs of blue per sq inch and you was good...just a tube watcher me you look like you almost have it or your close to finished..I'm not a trained eyeHere is a small straight edge in progress.
Joe
