DaveTooley
Gold $$ Contributor
We all started somewhere. For a long time I was dependent on the bushing keeping the reamer centered. That was before bore scopes and an even simpler tool, a jewelers loupe. There are tolerances in everything we use. Bushing and reamers included. So there is no such thing as a perfect fit. The simple key to a concentric chamber is having a concentric hole for the reamer to follow. That's radially and axially . Do that and you don't need a bushing. Then a simple pusher to push the reamer. It really is that simple.This has been a very interesting thread with an experienced smiths and machinists contributing. I am at the beginning of the learning curve when it comes to running a lathe. My question as a beginner is: If you have measured the reamer and are confident it is sized within tolerance and it is a piloted reamer with a bushing that fits correctly, wouldn’t you just need to measure the diameter of the chamber at the .200 line with a gauge pin to detect if the reamer was inserted concentric with the bore in a stable setup? If the gauge pin hits the number at the called out dimension at the .200 line doesn’t that tell you the chamber was cut to size and not oversized as long as the pilot keeps the front of the reamer centered and snug?
By chambering this way the chamber is cut to the size of the reamer and there is really no need to check the chamber. Errors in reamers most frequently happen in the throat area. I have never heard of a problem with the body of a reamer. Maybe if you get to cute tightening up the dimensions. Very seldom are there problems with two manufactures we use, more frequently with another manufacturer. I stopped spec'n out the body of reamers a long time ago. Reloading dies have to work so I base everything off of SAAMI dimensions.









