4
4Mesh
Guest
Charles,
Are you saying you had a thin spot where the old neck joined? Hmmm, interesting.
I've never pushed a shoulder back before so I've never seen that. I've seen what I call, "reverse donuts" where the initial neck turn was a bit aggressive and then after fireforming there's that thin spot where I cut to far into the shoulder (and now that's neck). They never caused an issue for me so I didn't get excited about removing that.
I use a K&M neck turning tool with the carbide mandrel. I reground all my cutters and sorta liked it when I put a negative pitch on the cutter. Sorta like a drill sharpened for drilling bronze. Remove the cutting edge so it can't dig in and must be forced into the part. I used that on my brass and when I'd turn then, the inside of the neck was formed against the mandrel so the inside was absolutely smooth. No polishing needed. Used more force and made a lot more heat, but cured all neck woes.
I was never happy with the inside neck ream that I did. I got much better results either in the lathe or just neck turning (or both since after the lathe I needed to neck turn). Of course once I went to a WSM I didn't need to bother with the lathe or reamer anymore.
Are you saying you had a thin spot where the old neck joined? Hmmm, interesting.
I've never pushed a shoulder back before so I've never seen that. I've seen what I call, "reverse donuts" where the initial neck turn was a bit aggressive and then after fireforming there's that thin spot where I cut to far into the shoulder (and now that's neck). They never caused an issue for me so I didn't get excited about removing that.
I use a K&M neck turning tool with the carbide mandrel. I reground all my cutters and sorta liked it when I put a negative pitch on the cutter. Sorta like a drill sharpened for drilling bronze. Remove the cutting edge so it can't dig in and must be forced into the part. I used that on my brass and when I'd turn then, the inside of the neck was formed against the mandrel so the inside was absolutely smooth. No polishing needed. Used more force and made a lot more heat, but cured all neck woes.
I was never happy with the inside neck ream that I did. I got much better results either in the lathe or just neck turning (or both since after the lathe I needed to neck turn). Of course once I went to a WSM I didn't need to bother with the lathe or reamer anymore.