Gents,
I have had the distinct pleasure of refurbishing a 1945 9" model A (48" bed) that I picked up for a song and have been gathering tooling to be able to do my own barrels.
I have done a lot of reading and have come across many different ideas regarding setup of the lathe, leveling/untwisting, and have borrowed a good friend and fellow shooter's machinist level. There is now no twist in the bed and I have been having a great time grinding my own HSS tool bits and fitting a quick change tool post to the compound. I have fitted one of Butch's tuners to some stainless drops from a local metal supply yard and making some mock savage tenons as well. Turns out my great grandfather was a machinist and when my grandfather passed away a few years agao I have been finding tools that his father used in his machining days...I am using his depth micrometer, needle nosed pliers, a bench vise that he made, a milling vise and v-block, and some screwdrivers that he machined as well. I wish he were around to talk to about this stuff... But I digress.
My question is regarding a test bar: 1) are they necessary, 2) if so, my lathe has the typical wear apparently common in these old lathes up near the headstock, but out where I would be doing barrel work the ways are in great shape. would it be wise to make a test bar the length of a typical barrel or would the wear at the headstock take away any benefit of creating one. 3) If I were to make a test bar from a 2' length of cold roll and then two collars made from aluminum with holes bored to fit the bar would this suffice? would putting the collars towards the tailstock end of the rod say 1' apart give me the information I need? - I'd rather not spend $200 on a long test bar and I don't know if the 1' bar such as Brownell's sells would tell me what I need to know.
Thanks in advance,
Mike
I have had the distinct pleasure of refurbishing a 1945 9" model A (48" bed) that I picked up for a song and have been gathering tooling to be able to do my own barrels.
I have done a lot of reading and have come across many different ideas regarding setup of the lathe, leveling/untwisting, and have borrowed a good friend and fellow shooter's machinist level. There is now no twist in the bed and I have been having a great time grinding my own HSS tool bits and fitting a quick change tool post to the compound. I have fitted one of Butch's tuners to some stainless drops from a local metal supply yard and making some mock savage tenons as well. Turns out my great grandfather was a machinist and when my grandfather passed away a few years agao I have been finding tools that his father used in his machining days...I am using his depth micrometer, needle nosed pliers, a bench vise that he made, a milling vise and v-block, and some screwdrivers that he machined as well. I wish he were around to talk to about this stuff... But I digress.
My question is regarding a test bar: 1) are they necessary, 2) if so, my lathe has the typical wear apparently common in these old lathes up near the headstock, but out where I would be doing barrel work the ways are in great shape. would it be wise to make a test bar the length of a typical barrel or would the wear at the headstock take away any benefit of creating one. 3) If I were to make a test bar from a 2' length of cold roll and then two collars made from aluminum with holes bored to fit the bar would this suffice? would putting the collars towards the tailstock end of the rod say 1' apart give me the information I need? - I'd rather not spend $200 on a long test bar and I don't know if the 1' bar such as Brownell's sells would tell me what I need to know.
Thanks in advance,
Mike