T
tasy_ted
Guest
Don't you mean divide?
hi all
jerry thanks for picking that up was a little pissed on my home made ginger beer
regards tasy_ted
Don't you mean divide?
A few years ago I got hold of Harold Vaughn's "rifle accuracy facts" book and read with great interest about the "ramp thread". It made a lot of sense to me so I ground up a high speed tool and threaded up several 6ppc LV barrels. As I said, the idea of equally loading all of the threads seemed like a really good idea and it probably is in other applications but we failed to see any advantage when it came to short barrel shanks.
Is that 1.6MMto a millimeter? How does that actually compare to 16tpi?
I'm so excited! I hope this doesn't mean that my Sako that has shot many hundreds of rounds is unsafe? inaccurate? or what? I don't care about index as I have no previous lettering on the barrel to align or iron sights for that matter.
You are funny Butch! Your sarcasm is very well done.
But just in case.....
Index doesn't matter cuz you are rebarreling and even if you are just re-cutting the chamber with a barrel that has letters, you just cut the shoulder till they align and then cut the tenon to the right length and then chamber till it headspaces right.
Safety is not the issue either. The Safety Factor built into a rifle is WAY more than any thread fit at this level would impact.
The only issue of concern to me is ultimate rifle accuracy potential. If I want a reasonable shot at being able to produce consistent 0.1 to 0.2 moa groups then I have to do everything right and leave no stone unturned. I'm sure very few customers would complain at 1/2 MOA or even 1/3, but a fussy customer looking for the most is a whole nuther matter.
To achieve the best results, smiths lap lugs, square receivers, align bolt and barrel, cut precision crowns, custom select match barrels, precision cut threads and chambers, glass bed actions, etc etc etc. The list is a mile long.
The Sako is no Remington diamond in the rough. But the old girl I am working on was a good one. She produced 0.2" groups all day long in good conditions. Then the owner went away on vacation, lost power, and the bore got rusty and pitted. If I put a select match barrel on it with appropriate load development that does less, I am gunna look pretty sloppy.
So I don't want to leave this alone just cuz "everyone does it that way". I wanna know whether it matters or not at the performance level that I am trying to achieve. If I can do that at 16tpi - FANTASTIC. If not, well the job just got much harder to do..... I'm willing to do some analysis to find the answer and hopefully learn something in the bargain.
PS - the only reason I mentioned turns is to point out how much the thread misfit really means in a way that others would understand better. Any who has ever screwed a barreled action together will quickly agree that an eighth of a turn is a lot!
You know I would let you humor me a little until you said 0.1-0.2 groups consistently. Tell me what 1/8 turn means in a barrel with no sights? If you are rebarreling, it really doesn't matter. Put the sights and lettering where you want it. Refresh my memory, what does lapping the lugs have to do with accuracy? If you have to lap the lugs you have not done your machine work correctly. or your bolt is loose in the bore and lapping will not help at all.
Hi All:
I'm late to this thread. I ran across it because I'm rebarreling a 22 PPC USA target model L461 myself. The barrel thread has been a mystery to me until I ran across this thread. It all makes sense now. A big thanks to Joe for the drawing information.
But I am REALLY curious about how you folks can call this situation an interference fit, and also how you can assume that it will improve accuracy. Unfortunately, my lathe does not have a 1.6 metric thread capability. So I am trying to make myself comfy with the idea of doing a 16 pitch thread. I`m just not there.
By my analysis, as the barrel is tightened, the so called interference will build up at the two ends of the tenon with good thread surface to surface fit and be loose in the middle of the threads with a tiny gap between faces, or worse be tight to the barrel shoulder and tight only at one end of the threads getting progressively looser toward the other end.
This is exactly what you DON'T want for accuracy. Its called binding, not interference. Binding creates the potential for the action and barrel to move between shots differently such that consistent vibration is lost. When consistent vibration is lost, so is accuracy. Action to stock binding is a very well known problem. I would think that action to barrel binding would be even worse.
Can you folks help me see why my concerns are unfounded?
Wished I could find my old thread gauges so I could run a 16TPI & a 1.6 mm together & see how they meshed.
oooops! looks like I'm a liddle late to the partay!!! I wrote my answer only to find when it popped up that THERE'S A WHOLE NUTHER PAGE!!!! Ohhh Wellll LOL al