how is rifling cut in rifle barrels

Imagine a little hooked scraper that would shave a thousands of an inch or so at a time. It is adjustable and is designed so it will not cut past what it is set for.... at least that is what I remember from a barrel I made in a shop 40 years ago...

Not all barrels are cut rifling... some are button rifled where a very hard button with the shape of the rifling in it is pulled through the barrel in one pass...

I am sure if you do a google search you will find many websites with good info.
 
There are three main ways, as outlined above; the oldest method is done with a hook-shaped cutter, that is pulled through the barrel while the cutter or the barrel is twisted, and you have to do that over and over again until each groove is cut as deep as it's supposed to be.
Hook cutter:
Barrel3.jpg


The second most common is called button rifling, which uses a mirror image of the rifling cut into a piece of very hard metal like tungsten carbide; that button is screwed into a rod which is pulled through the barrel blank under tremendous hydraulic pressure, leaving the land-and-groove pattern.
rifling-broach-web.jpg


The third common type is made with a full-length mandrel that has the rifling cut onto it from the outside, then that mandrel is placed inside a tube of larger diameter and the whole thing is put inside a hammer machine that pounds the tube down to the proper diameter and leaves the rifling pressed into the inside. Afterwards, the mandrel is pressed out of the barrel with hydraulic pressure; I can't find a picture of a mandrel, though, sorry.
 
There are 2 ways rifling can be made in a barrel:

It can be cut out or it can be pressed in.

There are many, many ways to achieve either process.

salt said:
Hey guys do you know what tool is used for cutting the rifling on rifle barrel. Just was wondering what tool is used for this.

When speaking of cutting rifling, the tool is called a cutter, a broacher, a rifler, a scorper, a rifling cutter, a rifling scorer, or whatever. Depends on circumstance and who you are talking to.
 
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SDC said:
The second most common is called button rifling, which uses a mirror image of the rifling cut into a piece of very hard metal like tungsten carbide; that button is screwed into a rod which is pulled through the barrel blank under tremendous hydraulic pressure, leaving the land-and-groove pattern.
rifling-broach-web.jpg

Actually, that is a picture of a broach.

Ted
 
Remingtons, on the other hand, are gouged out by tiny evil gnomes with Pulaskis and hoof rasps, who urinate in the grooves and heap curses upon the lands as they work their way through. That's actually a quite an improvement - up until a couple of years ago, they mixed cheese with their barrel steel and had thousands of tiny rats gnaw them out.
 
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yes thoses are the right thing. BTW the drill that is used to create the first hole before the button is pushed is simply called a gun drill, it is used in 100's of other application but is still called a gundrills. they used a special bit that can deliver the cuting fluids

index-drills.jpg


dm5.gif
 
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guntech said:
Imagine a little hooked scraper that would shave a thousands of an inch or so at a time. It is adjustable and is designed so it will not cut past what it is set for.... at least that is what I remember from a barrel I made in a shop 40 years ago...

Not all barrels are cut rifling... some are button rifled where a very hard button with the shape of the rifling in it is pulled through the barrel in one pass...

I am sure if you do a google search you will find many websites with good info.

would that have been a 444 for a Marlin 336?
 
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