Read an earlier post. I did. Though not through that exact route.Any thought about calling Lapua and getting the fact/s straight from the horse's mouth ?
Any thought about calling Lapua and getting the fact/s straight from the horse's mouth ?
A lot cheaper to punch. Drilling brass with HSS drills requires specially ground cutting edges to prevent the drill bit from being pulled in to the material. That and you're looking at drill motors running expensive carbide bits in the neighborhood of 5000 rpm.
Was that on a davenport? I used to run 4-5 of those at a time for 10hrs a day (felt like 2 hrs)I spend 12 years producing an automotive screw machine part in Brass that had a .080" dia. hole drilled to .430" depth. The operation took 7/10th of a second with a single HSS drill. We produced 3+ million parts annually on a single machine and each drill without sharpening would last nearly a half a million parts. A HSS drill goes through Brass like butter given the proper speeds and feeds. A drill is designed to pull into the material (creating a straight hole) and at the same time push the chips created out through the flutes.
Those same screw machines turned the extractor grooves in rifle cases for many years until case manufacturers went to designing dedicated machines to perform the operation. The Brass case itself is best manufactured in a progressive die, deep draw stamping operation and punching out the flash hole lends itself well to that type of process. As previously stated, maintaining the punch geometry and clearance between it and the backup die will produce a clean, burr free hole.
hemi, just curious, was that a through hole and was there lube or coolant?
Was that on a davenport? I used to run 4-5 of those at a time for 10hrs a day (felt like 2 hrs)
collet slappin dreams are bad for house catsWhy yes, that is exactly correct..... a Davenport. We had another 12L14 steel part that we produced over 55 million in 8 years with a "one second" cycle time. The OAL of the part was just over 1 1/8" and would go thru five 12ft bars of steel (a load) every ten minutes. One man running 5 machines was quite an orchestrated challenge. That's a whole lotta collet slappin !!
My palms just started hurting again- thanks alot.Why yes, that is exactly correct..... a Davenport. We had another 12L14 steel part that we produced over 55 million in 8 years with a "one second" cycle time. The OAL of the part was just over 1 1/8" and would go thru five 12ft bars of steel (a load) every ten minutes. One man running 5 machines was quite an orchestrated challenge. That's a whole lotta collet slappin !!
View attachment 1163961 Lapua 6br flash hole of recent manufacture.
They look the same when new.What I see is your decaping pin isn't centered, and if it were uniformed with a reamer the flash hole would be round. .....jim
They look the same when new.
I feel like i was listening to a tattletale or something. Ive never heard of a flash hole being drilled by anybody in the know. Can you imagine the production cost on that?