Butch Lambert
Active member
Yes sir.
i was told 29.5 last pass go straight half tho go over few times good lucki was taught in lathe school to use 29. Jackie was taught by his dad as i recall, not in a class.
I use 0 with my current setup.
Anyone have a fact based comment on toward or away from the shoulder ? Or was that based on 29*
Please see:
Please see:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PnH_oeOUps4
I also thread like you do. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PnH_oeOUps4 straight in.
You just need to practice till you can use more speed.
All I get from the video is that the 29.5 degree number is not critical. Certainly it is not, but that is not to say that there is something bad or ineffective about 29.5 degrees.
Like most things in machining lots of methods work. Some are more preferred than others but if whatever method you chose works and you are happy with it it's not my place to criticize your method. I was taught in various formal training settings that the 29 or 29 1/2 degrees had several advantages. Primarily less tool pressure and better chip flow. Normally I have the compound angled and the last light finish cuts are straight in using the cross slide. I have limited experience with CNC lathe threading so take this with a grain of salt. In the CNC usage my limited experience the most common pre-canned cycle is by alternating cutting on both sides of the v groove until the finish plunging the finish passes followed by 29/30degree tool path.. I don't remember a pre-canned CNC cycle that straight plunged the complete cycle but as stated I have only used a couple of different conversational CNC lathes for threading.
I tend to take fairly heavy cuts for rough threading and using the compound set at an angle on manual machines aids chip flow. That being said I have used zero degrees and that got the job done.
Some of the carbide tool geometry does not perform well without sufficient SFPM. My preferred insert for threading is the Kennametal NTP style inserts,. It's old school for insert technology but for manual machines I haven't found an insert that I like better.
I did not see mention of the type of barrel steel being machined. Is it a 416 SS or a Chrome moly steel?
Does it make any difference regarding the cutter material, rotational speed, or feed?
Centerfire
Watch "Jet 1024 Threading To A Thread Relief Aided By A Proximity Sensor" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/1D-HoFgNYFg
Gene,
Thank you for the kind words.
The worst I have seen is about 0.003 and front sort of rounded, that it took about .004 to clean up. Some of the other problems with the ARs are the barrel extensions. I can check everything including thread runout like Jackie described at one point, but when BE is screwed on and indicate it, it will be swinging 0.003.
Do all these matter, hard to quantify, I have not done any systematic testing to validate any. I put them in the it-cant-hurt category. I am not in the business, I am retired, time I have. Supporting 18 kids in the State Team keeps me busy.
If you can believe this guy, this is so far the only write up I've seen on incremental improvements on the platform verified on a machine rest.
Maximizing The AR-15: A former military armorer reveals his secrets for cutting AR-15 group sizes in half. - Free Online Library
https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Maxi...y+armorer+reveals+his+secrets...-a05207138981
These were taken last night, the kid wants to see how straight his barrel is. Thread was cut with uncoated carbide laydown for Aluminum at 34 RPM on the variable speed 1440, untouched, just cleaned up thread with brush, and air blown. The BE is pretty straight. Got it from WOA.
Watch "12 Aug 2020 Testing Thread Runout" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/CEFUO028lVI
Watch "12 Aug 2020 Testing BE Runout" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/CM434kOxx0s
On squaring the AR10 face I have been using a split ring (borrowed from Mike Bryant) and TS spider screwed on to a Royal live center.
Thanks for the response and the links.
GsT
Please allow this rookie to participate. I have a dedicated Jet 1024 for chambering AR15 barrels with compound sort of permanently set for taper boring. Even with this little lathe I thread plunging in with the cross slide. I use laydown inserts for aluminum. They cut 416 SS real well.
Watch "Jet 1024 Threading To A Thread Relief Aided By A Proximity Sensor" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/1D-HoFgNYFg
What kind of repeatability are you getting from your prox? I went with a 5 micron limit switch I’m getting about .0005 at 150 rpm
https://youtu.be/Ncc72aKgzVY
Shoot man that’s why I built mine takes the pucker factor out of threading to a shoulder I went from threading at 70 rpm to 300 ive kind of settled at 150rpm and I never have to disengage the half nuts