Anyone who knows me at all knows that I do not take offense easily to much of anything. I know people all have opinions based on their past experiences, and that sometimes when something new is presented it can be a little hard to understand or accept a new concept without some questions, and I'm fine with that. That is one nice thing about these forums, when these questions are raised others can benefit by "pushing their understandings" at the same time, like Joe Ponto pointed out.
One thing I do want to comment on is the concept where some of you apparently think that barrels can have "immediate curves" or veer suddenly off in different directions. All the curvature I've ever seen and measured in a barrel is extremely slight and always extremely gradual - nothing sudden about it. Normally never over about .035" over the whole length of the barrel. When you dial one end of a bore to run true, you have to go several inches up the bore before you start to measure the curvature beginning - the more curvature in a particular bore, the quicker you can start to see this happening . However, if the bore has a fair amount of curvature, and you have it dialed in to not account for this curvature, the curvature right ahead of the throat can show up very quickly and make it seem like there is a sudden change. But this is caused by the chamber not being in alignment to the bore at that point.
I am thoroughly aware that the curvature in a bore is not always a "straight" curvature, but almost always has somewhat of compound feature to it like I mentioned in an earlier post. This is so gradual and so slight, that I've never found it to be any problem at all, and rarely mention it to people when trying to explain this concept since it just causes more confusion than it needs to. When I index the muzzle end in the "up" position, it shoots just a little higher every time like I want it to.
Butch, I'm not sure why you are thinking the reamer is starting at an angle - it's not. Maybe because it's being lined up to the bore and not to the outside of the barrel, which aren't usually aligned to each other. The reamer is being pushed straight by a lathe center on a perfectly dialed-in lathe - it has to run straight. Plus it is being fed into dialed-in bore that has been bored true to the lathe, and the bore ahead of that for the next couple inches is also dialed-in to be aligned straight. Everything at that end is aligned straight and true to the lathe - nothing crooked about any of it.
Just please test this like I mentioned in yesterdays post and hopefully you will see what I'm talking about.
Back to you guys.....
Gordy