aero Be careful ...your mouth is starting to overload your ass, your starting with your insulting and personal attacks. My capabilities and resources may startle you. You have no idea what I can produce, now with you, we have a fairly sufficient overview.
Just what are you going to offer this discussion, just here to trash talk those of us that are not carrying a card.
BTW, aero, is the "e" for engineer, or for esq? Pray tell us it's not both. That's all the rage today.
SSSSOOOOOOOOO, whats the latest bling-bling material to build a BR action .....Besure to supply supporting documents.
YesSoooo .....Are the larger actions (whichever material Al,CM,SS )so over engineered that it boils down to cosmetics ?
I built my action from EN26. I'm not sure what the SAE equiviliant is, but according to my steel supplier (bohler) it's stronger and tougher (for a given hardness) than 4340.
By all accounts it does the job perfectly and acording to my calculations has a 600% safety factor.
See it here.. http://benchrest.com/showthread.php?59368-Action-Build-Log.&highlight=
Cheers
Leeroy
If you send the work to someone who does quality heat treat work, no, there's not enough distortion to cause any issues. Any process like that causes some, but, we're talking about really splitting hairs. Honestly, I can't imagine an action having an issue with that. Now, with that said, all the work I have ever had done, I always supplied the part to the heattreater with a screw plug that was made up to hold the part. So, in the case of an action, I'd make a barrel plug and put a hanger on that so the heat treater had a hook to hang the part from. I would never do any sort of HT with the part laying down if distortion was a concern. Not even in a fixture. Hang the part. Gravity matters.4mesh, On the subject of Nitrieding (QPQ, etc.) or Case Colored (bone charcoal)( I love the old school look)on a CM action. Would/could these processes change any critical dimentions (warping etc) of an action and should the action builder (I'm buying the action)be aware of these post build processes.
You've completely lost me now. I started posting in this thread due to one person's complete and total ignorance about the topic at hand, starting with posting about using a material that hasn't been in commercial production since before WWII, and another material that he couldn't accurately identify that isn't available because the company holding the patents has been out of business since 2006. And then the he wants to argue about a topic of which he knows not even the most fundamental facts.
I'm not trying to reinvent anything, improve anything, find a problem, or an invent an issue. So far all you've done is your best to bash engineers, who we all know couldn't design themselves out of a paper bag, or solve a problem in the shop, and create more problems than they solve. I don't know if the motivation is jealousy, ignorance, or simply wadded panties and sand in your mangina. It doesn't matter, either, your lack of contribution makes your opinion not relevent to the discussion.
The original poster started this thread looking for some information about why one material would be chosen over another. There are good reasons for those choices, some were even pointed out on the first page. They don't offer equal advantages or disadvantages, they're different and should be chosen to exploit their strengths. The fact that a job can be done with a particular material doesn't mean it's a good choice; I'm sure I could size up an aluminum or steel action from annealed stock that would function okay, but the whole damn gun would have weird dimensions in order to accomdate the poor choice of material. On the other hand, a person that knows what he's doing can strike off on a side path to investigate an interesting possibility without being forced to follow the crowd stuck on a path already broken for them, probably by an engineer in conjunction with a shop.
Not one single person posting in this thread made a comment about deficiencies of current materials commonly used in actions. Not one. As for the Ticalium, I am the only person posting here that tracked it down. The person that brought it up couldn't spell it correctly so the rest of us could get more information, but he was damned well going to insist it has to be good for guns if it is good for race cars. Well, a feller had better be able to argue and defend his position if he's going to make claims like that, and he couldn't beyond "whatever".
So, I'm still waiting too see if you will offer anything useful to the discussion.
Did you machine the action in the heat treated condition or have that done afterwards?
Leeroy, I followed your action build closely. I wish I had the equipment/skill to do that. Great build. BTW how has it been shooting ?
Remember when you argue with a fool, they are doing the same thing. -----Bill)
Yes mate that is how i did it. I didn't trust the local heat treat shop to do it without distortion so i machined it after heat treatment. Ok for one or two but far too hard on the tooling for production..
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My sentiments exactly, except I do my own small parts heat treat.Yes mate that is how i did it. I didn't trust the local heat treat shop to do it without distortion so i machined it after heat treatment. Ok for one or two but far too hard on the tooling for production..
Just that small difference was enough to twist the action to where the bolt would not go in. Worked beautifully once the whole thing was to a temp you could handle without gloves. Shocked me really, I was expecting that to need re-work, perhaps to the internal grinder. Never happened.