Well I've got threads cut by some serious gunsmiths and I've cut a few threads, and those are without a doubt the pertiest I've ever laid me' peepers on.... they look fake.
al
Ya know, I've been lookin at them threads thinkin the same thing. I gotta tell ya, just last year I was trying to cut some threads and I just couldn't get them to come out right.
I used a tool that Grizzly sells and I set my compound at 29 and a half degrees and went to cutten threads, man, there wasn't a nut in the country that would fit them threads.
I took a sample of my work to an ole friend of mine that builds little race cars, his name is Dale Ridgway, he said if I couldn't do any better then that I think I'd just !^@$&% give up.
I said I think I could do better if I just ignored that Chinese scale on my compound and eye-balled the 29 & a half degree angle in there that way. He said I don't know what to tell you, but, that aint worth a $#*! like it is.
He says, what makes you think they need to be cut at 29 and a half degrees any way? I told him I had this book written by a feller named John Hinnant and John had said something about it in his book.
I took my sample home and I looked at that little Chinese scale on my compound and I looked at my threads and I adjusted it a little more and I noticed it was lookin a little better when I got around to 60 degrees, so I cut some threads there and my nut fit right on it.
I cut a couple samples and went to show my ole friend that I wasn't as dumb as he made me feel.
He looked my threads over and reached into his tool box and handed me a protractor and said go back home and see if you can figure out what to do with that.
Well, I had to do something good with it or spend the rest of my life sitting on a bar stool, so I put my piece of inch and a quarter back in that lathe and went to cutten threads.
The next time I went to town I had a BAT rifle action screwed onto that piece of inch and a quarter shaft. I showed it to a couple friends that had a rifle or two and they thought it looked real good but, I knew there had to be something better.
I called up a friend of mine down in Missouri and told him what I had here and that I needed to find a way to cut some better threads and he told me about MSC and gave me a part # to a thread cutting tool and I took it from there.
Bill Wylde smithed a Bartlein barrel for me in 2007 that helped me win the Heavy Gun overall at the IBS 1000 yard nationals.
I watched him do some of the work on that barrel before I went home. Bills work reminds me of some of the lessons most of us got recently here on BR central about working off the steady rest & what I had read in Johns book.
I had been in Gordy's shop one day when I showed up early for a shoot and he was telling me he had come up with a new method for working through the headstock and that there was a video available if I ever bought a lathe, our time together there was a lesson in its self.
Later that year I had several barrels needing machined so I went down to N. Carolina to have Leonard Baity do some gun smithing for me. I took a coyote call and a varmint rifle with me so I would have something to do while my barrels were getting done.
I showed up on Friday afternoon and Jonathon was coming down with the flue so I spent all of the weekend and part of the next week polishing barrels and taking lessons from Leonard every chance I could get.
A couple years later I had several barrels sitting in a gunsmiths shop out in Pennsylvania and I had a neighbor that had some barrels needing done too, I asked him if I would buy a lathe could I do some work for him too, he said I could.
I thought it over a while and I called Sid Goodling up to ask him how he would feel about sending my barrels back to me so I could put that money I was about to owe him towards a new lathe. Sid offered some words of encouragement and sent the barrels back to me so I could order my new lathe.
Its not everyday you meet a man that will give up $800.00 worth of work and be nice about it, but, these are the people that I've found here in Benchrest.
I dont mean to try & make this sound like an autobiograghy like a rimfire gunsmith, but, I've spent the last few years trying to get over some bad times & having a lathe in my garage & some friends at the range anywhere in the country has helped keep me going.
Who would have thought I'd have a picture of one of my barrels on Benchrest Central getting compliments like the ones I got today.
Thanks...Jay Cutright