The guy who showed me how to chamber used the tailstock centre to begin with then with about .200" to go would switch to a floating pusher. In both instances he would use a double sided tap handle which he held by hand to create the resistance for the reamer to cut. His reasoning was that he could feel the reamer cutting and if the reamer grabbed at any time he could let go before it broke. He cut the whole chamber with a piloted finish reamer and an oil feed, personally I really didn't like it and felt it was both tiring, dangerous and most likely ineffective as by the time he thought the reamer was grabbing it would have - I really dont like the idea of my hand being so near the action, especially when you get down to full chamber depth. The reason he also used a double sided handle was that he felt that a single sided one would encourage the reamer to cut on one side more although one of the most common types (bald eagle) does exactly that. I read recently that some guys rest the single sided tap handle onto the tool post or something solid to create the drive, that seems a far safer method to me.
May I ask what your thoughts on this are guys?
May I ask what your thoughts on this are guys?