yeah not to mention 4140 or 4340 or any chromoly steels are affected by heat very easily not a good thing.
What Cr-Mo steels do you think are used for centerfire rifle barrels?
yeah not to mention 4140 or 4340 or any chromoly steels are affected by heat very easily not a good thing.
What Cr-Mo steels do you think are used for centerfire rifle barrels?
yeah not to mention 4140 or 4340 or any chromoly steels are affected by heat very easily not a good thing.
4140 for the most part but its heat treated properly
4140 for the most part but its heat treated properly
Thanks a lot for your willingness to help.
I was thinking 4140 or 4340 as the bbl steel. What do you think?
I have looked up deferent rifling machines on line
Barrels usually are not heat treated. Hardness has zero effect on barrel wear.
normalizing is heat treating as its treatment given to metal with heat in that case you bring the steel up to critical temp and slowly cool it 3 times the normalizes the granular structure in the steel
There is a book that will tell you how to build a rifling bench, using a rifled barrel and a blank, non rifled barrel. The book I'm referring to is ( and don't look at me funny) call, A do-it-yourself Submachine Gun. The author is the world renowned, Gerard Metral. The book is available at Chapters Book Store. ( you have to order it in, will mail it to your house, in about a week )Take a look at the setup he built for a rifling bench. It works, but I wouldn't want to mass produce with this setup. Hope this helps. I have the book kicking around somewhere. If you can't find a copy, just pm me and I'll see if I can find it and copy the pages you will need.
Also there is some pages on heat treating, and bluing and all the different ways. And the formulas for bluing,( hot and cold) ,parkerizing etc.
If they change the name of the book, and maybe the layout of the gun lol (machinegun) it wouldn't be a bad book, has lot of info, that is not related to the machinegun.
Just an idea.... But could you use a 22 pellets gun barrel and just rechambering it? Everbody don't flog me, just asking.
I'm not sure what I'm going to do, but making the bbl last will give me time to figure it out.
I recall a guy who made a barrel out of steel rebar, but he was a barrel maker. It shot well too.
I agree with the rest, the barrel will be the most difficult and costly to make correctly especially for a 'one of' experiment.
You will have a long learning curve in itself just building a working .22 receiver, bolt, trigger and all the parts and correctly heat treated.
Ron Smith made that barrel for singleshottom on the forum. Ugly as sin but it shoots well. As far as heat treating goes, .22 LR does not generate enough pressure to require recovers or bolts to be hardened. Obviously it's never a bad idea as in increases durability, but it have little to no effect on safety. IIRC, Cooeys are made from relatively soft steel.
A barrel made out of 12-14mm rebar would look awesome!!! Does anyone have any pics of the rebar barrel that Ron Smith made?
A barrel made out of 12-14mm rebar would look awesome!!! Does anyone have any pics of the rebar barrel that Ron Smith made?