- Location
- Western Manitoba
I've read that it was a thing in the British Army to use "breeching up" washers between the barrel shoulder and the receiver face to get the 7.62 barrels to proper index with proper torque numbers. I am trying to install a small ring mauser barrel with an .820" long barrel tenon to a receiver that appears to want a .610" barrel tenon. The barrel is from a 1907 Paraguay; the receiver is similar size to a Swede 96. I did not know that the .980" x 12 tpi small ring barrel threads came in different barrel tenon lengths, but they do. The barrel is chambered for 7.65x53 - I do not own a reamer for that, so shortening the tenon and deepening the chamber is not an option. So, considering installing a "breeching up" washer.
The British washers were an "in stock" item ranging from .060" to .080". I am looking at .210".
So, informed or experienced comments appreciated - has anyone used breeching up washers, and any particular reason why this would not work? If you have used them, is there an advantage to the "washer" being threaded and tightened up to the barrel shoulder before the receiver is installed, or can it be made up as a sleeve that skims along the top of the barrel tenon threads?
The British washers were an "in stock" item ranging from .060" to .080". I am looking at .210".
So, informed or experienced comments appreciated - has anyone used breeching up washers, and any particular reason why this would not work? If you have used them, is there an advantage to the "washer" being threaded and tightened up to the barrel shoulder before the receiver is installed, or can it be made up as a sleeve that skims along the top of the barrel tenon threads?