Butch Lambert
Active member
Al
Do you remove the area where the indicator probe scored the bore?
Chuckle Chuckle
Al
Do you remove the area where the indicator probe scored the bore?
Al
Do you remove the area where the indicator probe scored the bore?
i certainly hope that was humor.
anyone running an indicator hard enough to "score"
the material, is in the wrong business.
i certainly hope that was humor.
anyone running an indicator hard enough to "score"
the material, is in the wrong business.
Al
Do you remove the area where the indicator probe scored the bore?
Dave,
It's funny you say that. I indicate off of the grooves when dialing in the barrel for crowning, and every time I've done it, I've noticed a little "Ring Around the Bore" caused by the indicator stylus. As I indicate right where I want my crown, this gets faced off, and a 45 degree chamfer is cut on the bore.
I got to thinking about this the other day and ended up on the Long Island Indicator website. They sell stylus' for Interapids with a phenolic ball on the end that I imagine would take care of "Ring Around the Bore"...if one decided to tackle the issue.
No...I didn't buy one.
Justin
Nez,
Tolerances stack up between the reamer, bushing and barrel. It can be done but not by just shoving a center reamer in. I was talking to a wise man by the name of George Kelbly one day. Coming from the era of small lathes and working between centers he a bag of tricks somewhat different from my own. We all know that the ID is not concentric with ID on barrels so the question is how do you hold/spin either the barrel or the reamer in a way that mitigates the concentricity issue. It's so simple I felt pretty stupid when George told me his trick. Set up the barrel with the muzzle running in a steady rest. With the center reamer in hand run it to the depth you want, then pull it sideways towards you wait for it to stop cutting. You removed all the play out of the system and it finishes cutting on one flute. So simple.
Al
Do you remove the area where the indicator probe scored the bore?
Coupla' other things;
Use a stylus with a large diameter ball. A large ball will climb out of the groove to the land much better than a small one.
On odd numbered grooves (3, 5, etc) if you are using a 4 point adjustment (4-jaw chuck or spider) place a reamer pilot bushing in the bore then indicate the bore of bushing. I know, I know, with this method you are indicating the lands but the lands are the pilot hole of the bore, it was there first.
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........... but the lands are the pilot hole of the bore, it was there first.
.
When I got around to testing it it seemed to shoot OK. When I looked in it again with my borescope, I noticed the chamber showed reminents of one of the grooves present. I removed the barrel, chucked it up and indicated it in.
Pete
In my experience (BR gunsmithing fifteen years), I have found that rifles shoot more precisely with the standard 90° sharp target crown. If one expects gilt-edged accuracy (<0.2 minute for a full twenty-five shot aggregate), not only does the 90° crown produce the best results, but the barrels should probably be recrowned every 500 rounds or so. I’ve resurrected a lot of mediocre shooting barrels with a simple recrown job. Sometimes the results were dramatic…even with crowns that looked fine under inspection with a loupe. Recrowning benefits typically depend on how aggressive one is with their cleaning rod. Although I expect that even with careful cleaning, recrowning is good insurance for optimum precision because the muzzle becomes flared out like a blunderbuss around 0.010” from the edge, and the wear is uneven. This is apparently from the hot gases eroding the sharp transition edge of the muzzle. This wear pattern is present even on barrels cleaned only with patches (no brushing). Interestingly enough, this erosion is also present on the chamfered crowns that are reamed with a tool.
I think the chamfered crowns may be preferable for general purpose field rifles since they are more durable. If they are done properly they work very well. It is often times difficult to get the chamfered crown to cut evenly in the land-groove junction even with a perfect fitting pilot. I’ve found that if a little pressure is exerted on one side of the tool so it cuts on one flute (like Dave Tooley mentions above), it results in a more perfect transition between the lands and grooves. The far edge of the pilot will score the rifling with this method, but it can be minimized with a little EP bearing grease smeared on the pilot. Holding the tool in a collet holder (rigid or floating) even with a perfectly dialed in bore AND chamfer tool, the tool will often times cut unevenly.
As far as my experiments with chamfered crowns vs. sharp vs. lapped vs. 11° crowns, it seems to me that lapped and chamfered crowns provide excellent accuracy, but the groups don’t seem to be quite as small – almost as if the bullets are more sensitive to wind changes. Incidentally, I wasted thousands of really good bullets, an exceptionally good lot of gunpowder, and wore out a couple of very good rail-gun barrels testing the above over a three year period. In retrospect, I should have just left well enough alone and settled on the sharp 90° crown like the old timers said was the best.
An interesting tidbit about 11° crowns: Wally Siebert told me years ago that lab technician, Dan Pawlak (Hodgdon Pyrodex fame) claimed that under high-speed photography, the gases exiting around the bullet at the muzzle were perfectly cone shaped with an 11° crown. Many different angles were tried, but none of them exhibited this characteristic.
Nevertheless, I shot better aggregates and smaller groups with a sharp 90° crown than with a sharp or lapped 11°
Greg Walley
Kelbly's Inc.
Greg
Did you see any differences between FB and BT bullets?
I shot zero groups with both the flat base and the boat tail bullets with all of the crown configurations. I honestly couldn't tell if there was a difference between the two bullets with the 11° or 90° sharp crowns. But both styles of bullets were seemingly more sensitive to wind changes with lapped or chamfered crowns. Admittedly, I probably only shot 300 or so boat tails, so it probably wasn't a fair test. I think I know where you are going with this...and if you're thinking what I'm thinking, in that a longer bullet with a longer boat tail would benefit from the 11° crown, I don't know. These were 22 caliber 52g bullets with a very short boat tail.
It would be interesting if someone could get Lapua or some testing facility with modern instruments to see the phenomena of gas exit and its effect on bullet behavior with different crown configurations.