I have been getting the odd custom built over the past few years and as life passes and family grows my shooting and building budget shrinks. So, what if I build my own??
I realize that anything I build myself will not shoot as well as the work done by any experianced gunsmith, however, I will be able to take satisfaction in having done it myself. Much the same as casting your own bullets and handloading.
I am self employed, so if I take my time and save up a little I can write off whatever I end up buying because my equipment needs the odd jackshaft built or rebuilt, which requires a lathe. My commecial requirements are a little bigger than anything used for gunsmithing and I am not sure what can build my driveline will be accurate enough for much else.
Basically, I need to be able to build a 2" diameter driveshaft, fitted with 1310 yokes or a shear assembly depending on what part of the line it comes out of. Max OAL on that driveline is 60", that piece has a spline on one end, so I can run that on a tailstock. This leaves us needing a little bigger than 2" bore and 36-60" center, so would something like that be accurate enough to chamber on too, or is that a lost cause.
I have seen the Grizzly imported equipment and they look ok, but I've worked with american made oilfield equipemnt and chinese knockoffs too. THe differences in metalurgy were noteable at times.
Would I be better off to hunt around for a domestically made southbend of some sort, a SHeldon 15 or Pratt & Whitney, even if I end up with a really large piece of equipment as long as it can be fine tuned to within tolerence??
Bear in mind, I haven't worked with a lathe much to speak of, with the exception of my tiny handloading tools and the odd driveline that runs my tanker trucks pump driveline.
JT.
I realize that anything I build myself will not shoot as well as the work done by any experianced gunsmith, however, I will be able to take satisfaction in having done it myself. Much the same as casting your own bullets and handloading.
I am self employed, so if I take my time and save up a little I can write off whatever I end up buying because my equipment needs the odd jackshaft built or rebuilt, which requires a lathe. My commecial requirements are a little bigger than anything used for gunsmithing and I am not sure what can build my driveline will be accurate enough for much else.
Basically, I need to be able to build a 2" diameter driveshaft, fitted with 1310 yokes or a shear assembly depending on what part of the line it comes out of. Max OAL on that driveline is 60", that piece has a spline on one end, so I can run that on a tailstock. This leaves us needing a little bigger than 2" bore and 36-60" center, so would something like that be accurate enough to chamber on too, or is that a lost cause.
I have seen the Grizzly imported equipment and they look ok, but I've worked with american made oilfield equipemnt and chinese knockoffs too. THe differences in metalurgy were noteable at times.
Would I be better off to hunt around for a domestically made southbend of some sort, a SHeldon 15 or Pratt & Whitney, even if I end up with a really large piece of equipment as long as it can be fine tuned to within tolerence??
Bear in mind, I haven't worked with a lathe much to speak of, with the exception of my tiny handloading tools and the odd driveline that runs my tanker trucks pump driveline.
JT.