Wayne Shaw
Active member
Perhaps what he is asking, is that some people like to chamber the barrel first, then do all the rest after, such as turning down the tenon, thread and cone/recess.
I get the idea of measuring the distance a headspace gauge protrudes from an existing barrel for that rifle but how would I get measurements for an action for which I don't have an existing barrel or which has been modified by lapping the mugs and facing the action or going from an OEM recoil lug to a thick match grade recoil lug?
I can work out how to make a gauge to measure the action and another to measure the barrel itself but how to relate those two measurements to each other? That seems to be the trick.
Perhaps what he is asking, is that some people like to chamber the barrel first, then do all the rest after, such as turning down the tenon, thread and cone/recess.
As to cut pressure pushing the chamber out of center, it ain't going to happen. The workpiece is rotating remember? Given worse case conditions of a dull cutting tool and a hardened workpiece you may move the rotational center off axis but the chamber, if it is already cut will still be on axis when the cut is stopped. Granted in this worse case condition the tenon may have a slight taper but it still will maintain cyindricity with the chamber.Exactly.
I am reading about people cutting the chamber before the tenon is threaded. I have John Hinant's book and he talks about this as well. One reason given is that the sideways pressure of turning and threading the tenon can push the barrel out of perfect alignment so it is best to do it after the chamber is reamed.
So regardless of weather the action is free in my hands or glued into a stock, how does one measure the correct headspace without the tenon being threaded and without having an old barrel to measure?
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It's a heck of a lot easier to repeat depth mike readings with Jerry's first photo than with the second photo.
John Lewis perhaps?an upstanding man named John ??? (I cant remember his last name). It was this article and a few conversations with John that has helped me duplicate barrels as accuratly as I do.
John Lewis perhaps?
Yep, he's da man I was thinkin of.
As far as the cutting oversize, if you cut too much with out cleaning the reamer it will cause it to cut over size especially if the reamer cuts more on one side than the other becuase the flutes on that side pack and push the reamer off center. I only cut .025" at a time then I clean the reamer. It takes longer but helps with the problem you asked about.
Gary