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not woked but you could say ive hung around a few.butchlambert said:wildkid,
I don't use a floater, but if it is indicated properly, drilled, and prebored, what difference would it make. Have you worked in a machine shop?
if your gunna call me windchill im guna have to call you jscantdoit.jscandale said:I think what windchill is maybe asking is can the chamber ream bigger if the floating reamer is not floating properly. If that is what you are asking, then I think it probably could. Let just say as a hypathetical example, a smith chucked a barrel in a standard 3 jaw chuck and did not indicate the bore. It's probably safe to say that the bore's runout is maybe .010-.020", not to mention the since the bore is cockeyed in relation to the spindle. In this case, and it's a pretty exagerated example, if in addition to such poor setup, the floater was not floating properly, the chamber would certainly cut significantly larger than expected.
If this is not what windchill was asking, then I just wasted a minute of your time...sorry.
JS
haha ok sounds good. 8)jscandale said:sorry bout that...I just glance at these names.
You can call me what ever you want as long as it ain't late for dinner!
JS
wildchild said:Ok so whats the concencous of runout tolerance(TIR) in a chamber? As in at what point do ya start over
tap dancing in snow boots! HahaSwitchbarrel said:wildchild said:Ok so whats the concencous of runout tolerance(TIR) in a chamber? As in at what point do ya start over
Sounds like you're tap dancing around an issue...something happen?
Reamer prints might be helpful. Do you know that the chambering reamers were proportionately the same size in relation to the dies? As I said earlier, it would be unwise to assume perfection from the reamer or die makers. There are lots of reamers out there that would be better, IMO, if they were a tad bigger in the body. Proper brass sizing is a relationship between the die and the chamber. Which are you assuming to be correct? Keep in mind that they are both made with reamers most often. Why would one automatically assume the factory die was done properly but the custom chamber wasn't? If the chambers were all cut with the same reamer and you're talking about a single die, it would certainly be reasonable to say that the chambers were different, possibly from the floating holder or some other reason.--Mikewildchild said:tap dancing in snow boots! HahaSwitchbarrel said:wildchild said:Ok so whats the concencous of runout tolerance(TIR) in a chamber? As in at what point do ya start over
Sounds like you're tap dancing around an issue...something happen?
kinda, had 4 chamber jobs done in a floater style and loose chambers, had a few done differantly and off the shelf dies barely size the brass becouse there tight. to sume it up without great detail.
+1 and ditto on building winning guns. This ain't rocket science, just attention to detail and repetition.gunsandgunsmithing said:I don't agree that a reamer held in the tailstock will produce a tighter chamber, because the hea and tailstock would have to be in absolute alignment for it to equal a floating holder that works like it should. In fact, that's precisely why we use them. Head and tailstocks don't align perfectly, even on new machinery. Mfgs usually leave them high to account for wear on the lathe bed and bottom of the tailstock...even still, there is no such thing as perfect anyway. And yes, I have built record setting rifles and rifles that have won many matches and finished well in the points. That said, good eguipment is the easy part of the game. ---Mike
The reamer holder that I made for myself works on the exact same principle that you have described in your method, except I have 2 flat faces (one on the reamer, and one in the tail stock) with grease in between the faces to ensure little friction between them and very light spring tension to keep them from falling apart and hands free. It seems to work very well.butchlambert said:I push my reamer with a flat face tool in the tailstock. I do not want my tailstock to influence the path of my reamer. I want the reamer to follow a prebored hole. I spec my chambering reamer to cut +.003 larger at the base and .002 at the shoulder than my reamer that I use to make my sizing die. If your dies do not size the brass body, you will have chambering and extraction problems. I have tried to ream a chamber with runout, but haven't succeeded.
gunsandgunsmithing said:I don't agree that a reamer held in the tailstock will produce a tighter chamber, because the hea and tailstock would have to be in absolute alignment for it to equal a floating holder that works like it should. In fact, that's precisely why we use them. ---Mike
butchlambert said:Gordy,
Please take this in the right vein. You are lost on this. How you have seen it done is probably not the best way either. I understand coming from a layman it looks simple. CNC makes it no more accurate either.