Some weeks back, one of our members posted a thread about barrel steel choices and methods of action construction. Well since i have been evaluating the costs associated with action manufacture, i recently came to the most often asked hurdle of cutting raceways in action recievers. In the past i have done them in a shaper with a single point cutter and with time and experience could cut a steel reciever raceway in about half an hour a side after the bore was reamed and honed to gauge size. In alloy, it is about half that time.
Well just recently i came across the water jet cutters for a second time. Quite a few years back, i saw the value of these CNC cutters and their total stress and heat free process. But they were limited in the area of thickness and flare control at the extreme end of that thickness of material being cut. The other day i had a fellow walk in off the street showboating his new CNC water jet cutter. Like usual i asked how much and how thick and what type of material and to what accuracy and precision. Well in general terms and with the right caborundum grit, the accuracy i was told of is astounding. Half a thou sort of accuracy in most materials to about an inch thick, one thou to about two inches. So basically any scope rings i wanted duplicated for a fraction of the cost otherwise, can be cut in alloy, stainless and moly steels wih zero distortion and would require just a clean up and drill and tap to finish. Now the big question was how thick and what accuracy can you do steel to? He says 12 inches thick plate can be cut to an accuracy of about 20 thou. Now i reckon he is full of crap and then produces an eight inch thick bull gear cut out of EN36 for an overhead crane drive. It was a gear cut from a slab and was as perfect as it needed to be right down to the pressure angle on the teeth. Even the bore was cut with the keyway in it but just needed a clean up to be of a proper interferance fit. Sprockets he had samples of were no better or worse than laser cut ones i had used in the past.
I'm going to build a jig to hold an action sleeve square to the cutter nozzle and give him a go at duplicating Rem 700 raceways after i bore the blank. The machine needs an edge or hole to start cutting and i have been assured this is a walk in the park. We will see.
Tony Z.
Well just recently i came across the water jet cutters for a second time. Quite a few years back, i saw the value of these CNC cutters and their total stress and heat free process. But they were limited in the area of thickness and flare control at the extreme end of that thickness of material being cut. The other day i had a fellow walk in off the street showboating his new CNC water jet cutter. Like usual i asked how much and how thick and what type of material and to what accuracy and precision. Well in general terms and with the right caborundum grit, the accuracy i was told of is astounding. Half a thou sort of accuracy in most materials to about an inch thick, one thou to about two inches. So basically any scope rings i wanted duplicated for a fraction of the cost otherwise, can be cut in alloy, stainless and moly steels wih zero distortion and would require just a clean up and drill and tap to finish. Now the big question was how thick and what accuracy can you do steel to? He says 12 inches thick plate can be cut to an accuracy of about 20 thou. Now i reckon he is full of crap and then produces an eight inch thick bull gear cut out of EN36 for an overhead crane drive. It was a gear cut from a slab and was as perfect as it needed to be right down to the pressure angle on the teeth. Even the bore was cut with the keyway in it but just needed a clean up to be of a proper interferance fit. Sprockets he had samples of were no better or worse than laser cut ones i had used in the past.
I'm going to build a jig to hold an action sleeve square to the cutter nozzle and give him a go at duplicating Rem 700 raceways after i bore the blank. The machine needs an edge or hole to start cutting and i have been assured this is a walk in the park. We will see.
Tony Z.