Thanks Hunter. I was thinking of doing that and I may yet. It took me quite a while to get a lathe. You'll get there sometime if it's what you want.If I was you I would buy used shot out barrels to practice on. I sure wished I had a lathe.
Thanks LH for the heads up on the dia. That might be a deal breaker as I want some 1.25 strait blanks. I will check. As far as the taper I was planning on setting these back several times for practice. Once I get to 18 I might taper one sometime. That would be a good reason to get some use out of the taper attachment. I'll edit my original post.Beware- those $50 GM blanks are usually 1-1/16 OD which may not fit your needs depending what your action requires for barrel threads. I have heard that GM barrels often shoot very well, but you must also factor in the cost of contouring - I believe all their .barrels are sold "straight" contour.
Hi Riesel. Yes that's just what I want to do -chamber a cheap barrel and keep cutting it off and re chambering. I will probably do the heavy varmint chamber later -a good idea. I will need a stock with a barrel Channel to fit the blanks. ThanksIt sounds to me that what you are wanting to do is thread and chamber barrels, get a good fit between barrel and action, chop it off and do it again. A 50.00 dollar barrel is a good place to start as you can chamber a lot out of a 26" stick of metal. You don't really care if it shoots however that's a lot of wear on your reamers. I've used GM barrels and they can be pretty darn good shooters, hunting rifle accuracy for sure, but require a lot of cleaning. Just me, but I do a heavy varmint taper on a barrel and leave about 5- 5 and a half inch of barrel shank, put it in a Boyd's stock that I have inletted for the oversize shank and test the barrel and my ability at the range. Chop off the threads and re-chamber to something longer. Just kicking the can down the road.
Hi msalm. Well I hadn't thought of trying to lap one so thanks for the idea- I will try that - I have a borescope so I will be able to see in there.Cast a lap in one of those Green Mountain barrels after you contour it. Lap it out, maybe 5-10 minutes of work, then clean it up and chamber.... Borescope will show very similar to any shilen, better than douglas, etc... May be a tad oversize as GM barrels seem to run larger in groove diameter, but they still shoot well for what they are.
Thanks akajun for the info. I was planning on buying .223 blanks for this. I will watch the diameters. A post of yours on bench rest central got me thinking about the GM barrels to start with. I definitely want to try making an ar-15 barrel from a blank one of these days. Thanks hozthe GM gunsmith specials are $50, but it will tell you in the description if they are 1", ! 1/6" or 1.25" blanks.
BTW I buy the .223 1/7 for most of my NRA/CMP Service rifle barrels to put on AR's. THey shoot very well.
Hi Pablo. I'm lucky a local company where I can buy steel ( low carbon)is a few blocks from my shop. I have some 11/4 bar stock from them now and will probably get some more. ThanksYou should be able to pick up a chunk of 4130 cold roll at your local metal supply to practice on. Should be cheap and easy.
Hi Dennis. Stubs would work good, especially SS ones before I buy a SS barrel. 1st choice caliber would be 6mm. Then mabie 22-6.5-7mm-30Somebody ought to have plenty of "stubs" leftover which would work great for practice. What caliber are your looking for?
Dennis
I have heard good things about Xcaliber to. 150 sounds good but I would want to save one of them until I have a few chambers under my belt if I can. ThanksOr you could get a x-caliber unturned blank for $150 I think it was. And they are hand lapped! I have never had one but I sure do hear they are a good barrel.
Hi Dusty. That aluminum is a good idea.- I will do that. My idea using the GM barrels instead of used ones was that I could see how they shoot-like you say. It is tempting to get a 30" Kreiger-Bartlein ect for the first rifle so I could cut it off if I mess up. ThanksA 1.250 chunk of aluminum bar off ebay is what is be using. Get it all fit then chop it and do it again. Dont ruin your reamer on a junk barrel fitting the tenon is the first step then do a real barrel you can actually evaluate instead of one you know wont shoot