You can sure tell who has successfully chambered barrels by reading some of the answers. Be careful Eddie, I think you should be able to separate the wheat from the chaff.
+1 Butch. It doesn't take long for the "experts" to expose themselves.
You can sure tell who has successfully chambered barrels by reading some of the answers. Be careful Eddie, I think you should be able to separate the wheat from the chaff.
So are you experts going to help this man with some advise? Funny how gunsmiths seem to think their trade is rocket science. Sorry, its just another blue collar trade, not too much brains needed. Kind of like being a mechanic.
Don't know how bad the lack of concentricity is that you mentioned eww but from what little we have to go on, and assuming that you indicated well, you have mixed two different approaches to reamer control. If you prebore the chamber to fit the body of the reamer then you should not use a tight fitting bushing on the reamer. When the chamber is properly prebored you don't need a bushing at all. The reamer body is guided by the machining you did.
If you want to use a tight fitting bushing to follow the rifling, don't prebore or drill in any way. Let the pilot guide the reamer from beginning to end.
This is not about which approach is better but more about not using two different approaches at the same time. Don't blame the barrel for that.
I agree. I indicate a Deltronic pin in the bore first. I drill large enough to use my Mitutoyo 514-503 tenth indicator to reach in and double check the groove and bore. If you have a difference in the land height to bore, split the difference. Now it is time to taper bore and that allows your reamer to follow your taper bored hole with a loose fitting bushing.
Is that what you are looking for zmalibu? Ain't no secrets, just good solid machining techniques as Jackie has posted.
He does not state if he uses a taper bored or just a straight bored hole and he does not state if he confirmed the land to groove geometry. He does state that he used a snug fitting reamer bushing but if the lands and grooves are concentric and if the prebored hole is concentric to the grooves Im not visualizing how he can have this issue.
I don't think it would be a high land in a 6 groove barrel. I would say your pre drill method isn't right, or you didn't use proper size bushing. Just my guess.
This is a case of a picture being worth a thousand words. In this case it should already be obvious through a bore scope if one land is taller or shorter than the others. Or whether the length of the leads phases from long to short and back.
Thanks for doing the math Roeder. Is a .001'' difference in groove depth in the realm of possibility for a custom barrel?
Butch, why is taper boring necessary when I am trying to create a hole for the reamer to follow that is true to the indicated throat..will straight boring not be concentric and straight with what I have indicated..??I agree. I indicate a Deltronic pin in the bore first. I drill large enough to use my Mitutoyo 514-503 tenth indicator to reach in and double check the groove and bore. If you have a difference in the land height to bore, split the difference. Now it is time to taper bore and that allows your reamer to follow your taper bored hole with a loose fitting bushing.
Is that what you are looking for zmalibu? Ain't no secrets, just good solid machining techniques as Jackie has posted.
Butch, why is taper boring necessary when I am trying to create a hole for the reamer to follow that is true to the indicated throat..will straight boring not be concentric and straight with what I have indicated..??
Just a question. What's the distance between the bushing and the throat? I have a reamer for a 2.500" magnum made on a long blank. The bushing is a considerable distance in front of the throat. I have to use an undersize bushing and allow the reamer to self center or the throat is not concentric.
Dave
I use a hybrid method similar to this. I first drill to .2" of the finished chamber, then indicate the throat and bore the first .5" to just over shoulder diameter. I then run the reamer in with a tight fitting bushing to establish the start of the chamber. Bore out the rest of the chamber to just under shoulder diameter, and finish ream.I'll add my 2 cents. I use a Interapid long reach indicator, indicate the bore 2.75" in. Then I use a .0001" indicator and indicate the far breach end. I go back and forth untill I get .0001"-.0002" Which is as good as my bearings will allow. I then will run my reamer in untill I have cut .1" of body. Then I will drill/bore .2" short and finish reaming the chamber. The Initial reaming, gives the reamer a place to start after you drill, and I found letting the reamer do all the cutting for the last .2" gave the tightest chambers. I inside mic all my chambers and the base measures what the print reads. As Butch stated, if your indicated right the reamer wont even need a bushing. I also go in after and check concentricity between the bore and throat after the work is done. I am very confident in this method.