Why not use a parting tool to cut barrels,
? Am I the only one doing this?
I'm all about "mechanisms"...... as in "what is the MECHANISM for the supposed good or bad thing" and why is the thing "good" or "bad?"
As in, "my bullets go to sleep and group tighter with distance" so I say "what is the MECHANISM, what is the force that turns them toward center??" AND.... show me proof, show empirical data, targets!
As in when someone says "weighing primers" or "culling brass" or "reaming flashholes" is imperative I ask "WHY?" and where's the measurable result??? Most often "the result" is touted as lower ES. So I have to ask, "but if I'm right now GETTING ES under 10fps without doing these things, "WHERE'S THE CONNECTION?"
When Jim Borden says "I won't letter/number-stamp barrels because it deforms the steel clear through to the inside" and furthermore explains the mechanism and states that "it can be detected empirically"
I lissen
When I hear "PUSHES/DEFORMS" with no explanation of WHAT is being "PUSHED/DEFORMED".... I go "huhh??" In my use of the cutter pictured it sometimes pulls the workpiece towards me....and facing/crowning ALSO can be said to "push/deform".... can't it?
Calfee sez "you turn a muzzle too small when threading for a muzzle device and it swells up, bells the bore".......OK...... so we can presume this is 'bad', and furthermore show it on targets. And FURTHER-furthermore..... we can find the belling using fitted plugs.... so I agree with him. And understand the mechanism...
Calfee sez "stopping the muzzle" and I go "huhh??" (He never went so far as to call me "funny people" but we argued this idea some!! LOL)
Calfee sez "dimensionally larger due to heat" I say "huhh??" So what's the
mechanism??? Does the barrel swell up under cutting, work-harden on the cut face and STAY larger??? Or What?
I'm not buying in until someone can explain why it's bad, me.....