Good Gunsmithing book for machinist?

Armedsask

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First off, I'm a journeyman machinist. I've been in an out of the trade for years. Mostly worked CNC. I pick up my own lathe last year and have done a few basic gun jobs on some clunkers like threading barrels

Anyway, looking for a book that covers gunsmithing practices and techniques but is geared towards someone that already has a machinist background. Does such a book exist?
 
Most smithing doesn't involve a lot of machining. More about that patience stuff you hear so much about and having the right hand tools. Not necessarily a rotary tool though.
The NRA Gunsmithing Guides. Gunsmithing Kinks. Forget who wrote it. George Nonte, I think. Amazon.ca will tell you. Amazon is also the place to buy 'em. You need lots of money for books.
There are a bunch of assorted assembly/disassembly books too. Those are way more important than any other book. Daft how some stuff comes apart and must come apart exactly the way the book tells you.
There are some firearm specific books as well.
 
The vintage books by Howe, Baker and Dunlop have some machining information. There is a book by Hinnant on barrel fitting which is useful. Home SHop Machinist publishes articles, and the collected articles are available in a couple of books. Rifle Magazine publisher has a book which is a collection of articles written over the years; some good stuff there.
 
I guess what I'm asking is if there is a book that is going to give specific gunsmithing stuff, and not try to teach me how to dial in a part, or read a micrometer. Show me gunsmithing stuff, not machining basics I already know.
 
So are you looking specifically for books about metallurgy, spring making, forging, chemistry, woodworking, engraving, toolmaking, metal finishing related to gunsmith every day activities. How about some trigonometry and or ballistics books. What is your interest in all this? Do you want to Be able to make gun from the ore or be just another armorer? Anyhow, you are not looking at one book only but entire library. Start with first one and go from there what ever that may be.

God one would be "Fighting Iron" as a start.
 
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Gunsmithing Tips and Projects - Wolfe Publishing - a collection of magazine articles which includes good material on barrel fitting.
NRA Gunsmithing guide is interesting, but the technical details are not rigorous. Anyone who advocates using a three jaw chuck for barrel work loses me right away.
 
"The gunsmith machinist" by Steve Acker. Volume 1&2.

A nice thing about these books is they were written in modern times...
 
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"The gunsmith machinist" by Steve Acker. Volume 1&2.

A nice thing about these books is they were written in modern times...

these books. And "Gunsmithing" by Roy Dunlap - a bible of info

I've been tried to find a copy of "tricks of the trade - custom rifle metalsmithing" by Mark Stratton, which I hear is also very good...if you find it scoop it up, it was printed on hens' teeth.
 
I have a signed copy of mark strattons book, and the complimentary cd. It's more jigs and fixtures than actual info, but it does have some neat ideas.
 
I'm in much the same boat. A life time of home hobby machining and metal work but fairly new to guns. So working the metal is pretty easy. It's more a case of learning the gun specific stuff.

So for me I find I've gotten the most data from books such as Jerry Kuhnhausen's "The 1911-A Shop Manual". And want to get his book on single action revolvers as well.

If you're working on rifles instead of handguns I'd try to get similar books on a few different makes and models. Obviously there's going to be some good books on the Remington 700 what with it being so commonly popular for builds. But a few for other rifles can't hurt. Or something a little more generic on reworking bolt action rifles. And I'm sure there's a similar detailed book or two on the AR/M16 style rifles that has this detailed shop operation information as well.
 
Lots of good books out there to glean bits and pieces of useful info from. Lots more that have out of date info, like 'sporterizing' cheap and readily available milsurps that nobody much cared about at the time. Which are not cheap or readily available anymore...

But you pretty much gotta glean through the whole lot and pick and choose the data that applies to what you want to do. No one book out there can cover it all, and there is a lot of the stuff from long ways back that is as applicable now as ever. Just depends what you want to do.

Gunsmithing is such a generalists specialty, if that makes any sense. The expectation is that a Gunsmith should be competent working with both wood and metal as well as having an eye for design and line, on top of trying to figure out how to make a living at it. Machine work can either be almost none, or all that a particular fella does, depending on the field he gets into, and the client base he wants.

You pretty much need a library to draw upon.

You can do worse things than to look at a copy of each volume of Dunlap's Gunsmithing, and a copy of Hatcher's Notes, as a darn good start,then work out in the general direction you wish to go. I suspect that you would find most gunsmith written books about machining, to be pretty elementary stuff, from the perspective of the machining itself.

I have not ran across 'the' book yet, and I have a fair few around. Guns are not, for the most part, any more high-tech than anything else a general purpose Machinist should be able to deal with.

Cheers
Trev
 
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