1. A .22RF does not need to be threaded, really no danger of blowing it off.
2. One less machining process on a already expensive barrel.
3. Crown exit, when you have a .900 + or- barrel, turning it down to .500 may let the muzzle open up, be it ever so slightly, that may cause accuracy to degrade.
So, if you think the bore needs to be tighter at the crown, I'd suggest a close fitting clamp on design and affect the bore diameter with torque? Nothing else has been quantified, so why not?Here is my take on this, it's only my opinion, but as an engineer, I think at it from that standpoint.
1. There is so little recoil, that almost no force is needed to keep the tuner from moving on the barrel. Therefore, almost any attachment method will work.
2. Threading the muzzle requires a step that is precision in nature and must be concentric, parallel etc. I am not saying it is hard, but if it is not done, it can't be f'ed up.
3. The joint in question needs good connection from a structural standpoint to transmit the vibration, although I have also put a compliant material in the joint in the past trying to soften it up some. I have mainly used blue masking tape. In the end, I could not see any real difference. It think it depends on how you think the tuner works. If you believe it extends the length and changes mode shapes, it needs to be structural. If you believe it is more of a dampening device, the compliance may be better.
Testing answers these things definitively, fwiw.
4. Reducing the OD of the barrel WILL open up the bore. How much and how much matters is up to discussion. I don't think 0.020 off the diameter has enough effect to notice. I cannot determine any change using deltronic pins for that amount. 0.100 on the other hand, can be detected and will open it up. You feel much more with a slug. It is more sensitive then the pins can measure. Put a barrel in a machine vise and slug it back and forth depending on how tight you make the vise. You will be amazed at how little force can be felt. When lapping barrels I am VERY CAREFUL to limit my force in the vise to just enough to hold it. Opening the end of the barrel up is not good if the barrel is properly taper lapped in my opinion.
5. Attaching the threaded tuner requires specs to be applied as to the method of tightening. Tightness directly relates to what happens to the bore. By definition there is clearance in the threads for them to work, so there is really not a good structural connection in the threads themselves. A lot of the structural connection is at the face where it tightens against. Other options are loctite etc, but the glue is only good for about 2500 psi stiffness compared to 60,000 and 150,000 psi in the aluminum and steel. There are lots of areas of concern for the joint in the bore shape. Same holds for the chamber end. I have found anything over 400 in-lbs on the barrel torque will compress the bore. Under 200 in-lbs and the joint unloads under chamber pressure and vibration induced motion. I use 300 in-lbs on all my 750-16 threaded barrels.
Personally, I believe the best joint is a close fit (0.001) between the tuner and the barrel and very light tightening of the screws to hold it in place. I use the small leg of the wrench to hold and tighten them with.
Jerry, in post #4 you mentioned a detectable bore growth when reducing the OD by .100 or more and you feel this is not good, so I understand you are speaking of strictly the muzzle end? what are your thoughts on reducing the OD at the chamber end?
Thanks,
Lee
Now I’m curious, why would you do that?
Tim, some barrel contours are 1.200 at the chamber end from anywhere in length of 3-4". turning them to have a better fit/transition to action.
Lee
Jerry, in post #4 you mentioned a detectable bore growth when reducing the OD by .100 or more and you feel this is not good, so I understand you are speaking of strictly the muzzle end? what are your thoughts on reducing the OD at the chamber end?
Thanks,
Lee
Well, I guess that answers that question although I cannot imagine simply not getting a RF blank .900” +- even for a 40X type tenon.
First of all, I am only shooting 50 yard ARA type of benchrest currently. ALL of my efforts go to that goal. I think most of my issues and data apply at longer range, but absolute accuracy is maybe less important due to outside environmental conditions in longer range. I do most of my testing indoors where anything that happens is due to the equipment in general. I have went to extreme lengths to build the most accurate guns in the world. At the last indoor nationals, my actions finished top 6 and I personally built 3 of the top six guns and finished 3rd myself.
I have been lapping my barrels for probably the past 5 years. I have probably lapped, chambered and tested at least 300 hundred barrels in that time. Probably more than anyone that is not a barrel maker in all reality. My goal for the finished blank is to have an EVEN taper from breech to muzzle. I don't want a variance in how the barrel tapers as it goes. The ONLY way to really tell how the lapping and taper is done is to slug the barrel bi-directional. The slug can see probably 10 times more sensitive than any measuring device.
If I am going to turn down the OD in any particular place more than about 0.020, I will do it before lapping. I always rough out the tenon on the chamber end on the bigger barrels for the 0.750 tenon. I have done it on the 0.900 barrels, but I have not noticed it to matter as the effected zone is only about 0.150 from the lead to the shoulder. If the shoulder was further down the barrel I would rough them all.
As an experiment I took a mediocre 0.900 barrel and lapped it as straight as I could and then just put a tiny bit of taper in it, just so you could feel the slug. I then took it into the lathe and started turning the OD down in the center for about 6 inches. I wanted to see when I could feel it open up. At about 0.050 off the OD it could easily tell when the slug hit that spot. It was not dramatic, but probably 0.000050 change. Seems small, but normal end to end taper is 0.000200. At about 0.100 off you could really tell. At 0.200 off it had no resistance at all. That usually is about 0.000200 in my experience. That told me just how important not doing anything to the OD was. I cut the barrel in half and using deltronic pins it showed 0.000100 to 0.000200 of opening up.
To answer your question, it applies to the whole barrel. No matter where you do it, it affects the bore. I want it as I lapped it in the first place. IF you are going to have it open up though, THE BREECH END IS MANY TIMES LESS IMPORTANT THAN THE MUZZLE. I would never want even a quarter inch of muzzle end opening up. Once it happens, there really is no fixing it with clamps etc. No matter how you affect the end, it isn't even like it should be.
I have reams of data on those kind of experiments too. Too much to type and probably read though
Thanks for the replies. My plan is to slug the barrel to determine where to cut. I will turn down the .900 diameter to like .875-.880 for a slip on tuner.
DSM,
Is there a reason you would not bore the tuner to fit the barrel?
TKH
Yeah...tuner will be bored to match whatever. I figure it would be better for the tuner to shoulder on something?
DSM,
Is there a reason you would not bore the tuner to fit the barrel?
TKH