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Tuners

On Rim fire tuners they have 25 marks. But they have a detents 500 total. Out of the 500 you will find 4 or 5 that works. All the tuner is forward of the barrel
That tells me any thing less then 100 marks per rotation is a loss. Depending on the number of threads per 1'. Larry
 
It's warm here today, but windy and raining. Sometime this month, weather permitting, I'll post pics and a tutorial on using my tuners...maybe even a YouTube video ;D . Sometimes, a picture is worth 1,000 words. I can show in pics, groups at each mark on the tuner for several groups. It will clearly show the groups open and close...and correlate directly to pics of tuner settings with each group.


Meanwhile, here's a picture of one a few of my tuners, almost finished, and a link to my website. There's a very good read linked on my tuner page, to a research paper done at Texas A&M on particle dampening. The first tuners pictured on my site were of the first ones, made without numbers, only hash marks. The new ones are numbered for easier reference. In all honesty, the numbers are nice, but not necessary because the range of motion to stay in tune is so small, you really don't need them to keep up with adjustment. The centerfire tuners are designed to be threaded onto the barrel. The rimfire version clamps on and has an inner tube that can be cut to your PRX length. PRX is a whole other subject regarding tuning. IME, it does NOT apply to centerfire at all, but many have had great results using it in rimfire.


Here's the link. Do read the study if you have the time. It's very interesting.
http://www.ezellcustomrifles.com/home-3/pdt-tuners/


...and a picture of some of my centerfire tuners.


12-22-14028_zps1d8c36cf.jpg
 
This my thoughts . The reason you see more vertical then horizontal is because of gravity. But at some point the vibrations change from vertical to horizontal. That is a tune point. You have a bottom and a top of vertical. Head and tail winds change vertical just like a tuner.
Barrels that have ben timed or clocked at 6 and 12 tune better.
Tuners work in a vertical rectangle. I find barrels that have ben chambered off the true bore not of the od and are timed to the top or bottom tune better.
Lines or numbers on tuners is just a reference where to start.
On a rim fire 22 tuner 0.277777 movement is a tune. On center fire I think it would be about the same. My testing I find the width of a fine tip marker can be too much movement. Larry
 
savagedasher said:
This my thoughts . The reason you see more vertical then horizontal is because of gravity. But at some point the vibrations change from vertical to horizontal. That is a tune point. You have a bottom and a top of vertical. Head and tail winds change vertical just like a tuner.
Barrels that have ben timed or clocked at 6 and 12 tune better.
Tuners work in a vertical rectangle. I find barrels that have ben chambered off the true bore not of the od and are timed to the top or bottom tune better.
Lines or numbers on tuners is just a reference where to start.
On a rim fire 22 tuner 0.277777 movement is a tune. On center fire I think it would be about the same. My testing I find the width of a fine tip marker can be too much movement. Larry


Larry, I'm not going to disagree, but there are variables that make that type of blanket statement, regarding how far tune spots are apart, impossible to make. Tuner weight, it's location and barrel stiffness are just a few of those variables.


Herein lies part of why there is so much confusion about tuners. Different designs, weights, thread pitches barrel stiffness..and guns they are on, all make it difficult to state instructions that work on every tuner and/or every gun. It's also part of why my tuners are designed where the threads don't show. Literally, people take one look at an inch or more of tuner threads and jump to the conclusion that it takes lots of movement to affect tune. You and I agree that this is false. With every tuner, of every make, that I've tested, very small adjustments make a difference. Defining what very small means is difficult, as it varies with the above mentioned factors...and then some.


I make mine with a .900x32tpi because it's the closest thing to a "standard" thread pitch and diameter as there is...or was. I'd like to see those dimensions be somewhat standardized to minimize that piece of the confusion when explaining how to adjust them.


As more shooters come around to using tuners, it seems there are more variables every time a new one is released.


As I've said many times, though, it's much easier to use a tuner than to explain, particularly when dealing with different design aspects, gun, and even disciplines.


I certainly don't want to sound like Bill Calfee, but I agree with him that it's just a matter of time before tuners are standard equipment on competitive centerfire rifles. IMO, the advantages are clear as can be and the reasons are backed by physics...not by art work or voodoo magic.


Another thing people have to understand about tuners, is that they don't typically make a perfectly tuned rifle more than perfect. If the standard by which they are judged is against what a gun has done when tuned to the hilt, then people are setting themselves up for disappointment. That applies to anything done to or added to a rifle. The real advantages are not going out of tune as quickly or as badly...and being able to take care of any tune issues at the bench without changing the load or ammo.
This equates to better aggs more so than better groups. We all know a single group means very little, but an agg is what's being contested.


To me, tuners are the biggest advancement in years, to competitive shooting. I haven't shot a match without a tuner in about 8 years now, and I don't see that changing unless something better comes along.


It may sound too good to be true to some, but imagine never loading at the range again. It's the way I've shot benchrest since going to tuners. I get to actually enjoy myself and be competitive without it being like going to a job. It's a heck of a lot easier to learn to use a tuner than to learn to keep a gun tuned to be competitive with powder charge and seating depth....way, way easier.--Mike Ezell
 
All of ours are on are on 32 TPI They range from .750 to 1.260 the larger the tuning ring weighs more. I don't know any stainless that you could cut 40 TPI . Tuning ring weight I find you need enough but excessive only narrows the tuning window. Larry
 
savagedasher said:
All of ours are on are on 32 TPI They range from .750 to 1.260 the larger the tuning ring weighs more. I don't know any stainless that you could cut 40 TPI . Tuning ring weight I find you need enough but excessive only narrows the tuning window. Larry
That's backwards or makes no sense. A heavier tuner will cause more vertical deflection, slowing down the dwell time, giving a wider window to tune to, as well as lowering the speed, or frequency of vibration. You're right, gravity does make a barrel move more on the vertical plane, though...and that's relative because it makes the horizontal less of a percentage of deflection, in turn making the node seem narrower if the tuner is too heavy. It takes quite a bit to be too heavy, on cf br contours.
 
Mike I said Excess and didn't refer to any one barrel or weight So we agree to disagree ;D Thanks for the correction on how I stated it. Larry
 

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