best way to shorten action screws?

alinwa

oft dis'd member
OK.... So I've tried hacksaw, sawzall, bandsaw, cutoff wheel in dremel, corner-cut on grinding wheel, bolt cutters, shearing pliers, rebar cutter, can't remember what-all else.....

Currently I spin a couple 1/4-28 nuts on, hold it in visegrips and just lean into a coarse carborundum wheel and MELT 'er off...... like grind off a half inch...... red hot and messy.

Then clean 'er up in a screwholder gizzie.

I'd like a nice clean method to cut a bolt off square without completely destroying any hardness that may be present.

Anyone got a better way?
 
Hey buddy! :)
I measure and lightly cut through with grinding wheel, then touch up on belt sander at slight angle. I hold with fingers to see if it’s getting to hot. Nothing cosmic or new. I’m sure there’s a better way, but did some today for a build and worked
 
for small changes i just grind to fit, with water cooling
really sharp fine tooth blade in a hacksaw for bigger changes.
i leave most a little long and use a dremel to fine tune lengths
 
Chuck it in a drill & gentle it against a belt, bevelling down a tad past final length then squaring the end off.
 
If you have a lathe and collet attachment, just use a 1/4 collet. Insert the screw from the back, then install the collet in the lathe.
 
Everyone should have two cheap 6" grinders. One with an abrasive cutoff wheel and a Scotch Brite wheel. The other with a wire wheel and medium grit stone. You can shorten, clean, chamfer, sharpen, polish etc in short order.
 
I don't have a collet attachment so I take piece of round aluminum drill it in the lathe three jaw and then split it with a hacksaw. CLamp it in the three jaw and cut away
 
Everyone should have two cheap 6" grinders. One with an abrasive cutoff wheel and a Scotch Brite wheel. The other with a wire wheel and medium grit stone. You can shorten, clean, chamfer, sharpen, polish etc in short order.

Hey now!!!

I like that!

I didn't even know about the Scotch Brite wheel.... I have them for angle grinders (which I've never used) guess I'd never considered th'owing one on a bench grinder


This WILL happen, today :)
 
Al,

What I've done is drill and tap a piece of aluminum roundstock that is shorter than the screw. Tighten the screw up in the hole, then chuck it up in your lathe so the to-be-cut end of the screw sticks out. Part or face to length, and chamfer.

Works like a charm.

Justin
 
I have some soft jaws with a 1/8” gap ground out about an inch back from the face. Works for rear screw, but not for front.
 
Everyone should have two cheap 6" grinders. One with an abrasive cutoff wheel and a Scotch Brite wheel. The other with a wire wheel and medium grit stone. You can shorten, clean, chamfer, sharpen, polish etc in short order.

Well, I broke your rules a liddle :) I bought a 5/8 arbor buffer drive which accepts all my right-angle grinder wheels..... and a stand.....and am tying it to the wall and building elbow supports after church today.......

It's not breaking the Sabbath when you do it for fun, right?
 
You say you have a lathe, so put the screw into an appropriate sized die, put the die in your 3 jaw chuck, face the screw off to the length desired. Then use a file to roll over the lead thread.
Easy peasy!
 
You say you have a lathe, so put the screw into an appropriate sized die, put the die in your 3 jaw chuck, face the screw off to the length desired. Then use a file to roll over the lead thread.
Easy peasy!
I have 3 3-jaws but I can't imagine ever using one

I'm good enough with a 4-jaw, and have sometimes used a bassackwards threaded dealio but next time the screw was trimmed further.... like only left a quarter inch of thread.....and it wobbled and jammed.... and I weren't gonna'make another one so I faced it off.....

And se



Can't picture a die working.....are you figuring it'll clamp down because it's slotted?
 
I bought an inexpensive vacuum base vise from Harbor Freight just for this job. It has vertical V groves in both jaws as well as horizontal. I use the vertical ones, clamp the screw and use a file for small adjustments, and a cutoff wheel on a Dremel type tool for the rough cut, if more needs to come off, and then finish with a file.
 
I have 3 3-jaws but I can't imagine ever using one

I'm good enough with a 4-jaw, and have sometimes used a bassackwards threaded dealio but next time the screw was trimmed further.... like only left a quarter inch of thread.....and it wobbled and jammed.... and I weren't gonna'make another one so I faced it off.....

And se



Can't picture a die working.....are you figuring it'll clamp down because it's slotted?

Exactly!
 

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8" disc sander and a bucket for quenching. You can watch the top thread melt away and you don't get as much of a mushroom top as you would with a grinding wheel. I would much rather use the lathe, but the disc is real easy
 
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