Hi there!
PART I
For whatever reason, I LOVE the mini-14/30 platform as an all-purpose semi-auto rifle. I gleefully play with my .223 guns shooting my run&gun course from 400meters down to 100 meters on Steel Silhouettes, and I've enjoyed boar and deer hunting with both the 7.62x39 and 6.8SPC guns.
One thing that's troubled me about the 7.62x39 guns though are the magazines. The factory 5 round mag seems to always have trouble with the last round, and while I've never needed it hunting it's always bugged me. I also did not like that I had to have two stashes of expensive mags....factory 5/20s for the .223 and factory 5/20s for the 7.62x39 (with no factory 5/20s available fo rthe 6.8SPC). Then when the 300AAC blackout started taking off I was pretty interested...I might be able to standardize my magazines, and brass supply could be simplified significantly too if I could get set up to make cases from .223.
So early in the year I got motivated and set out to try. I first tackled brass, and some will remember threads I posted on my process early on. It's become quite a bit more efficient now, but brass is not the focus of this thread...
I'm lucky enough to have a good shooting buddy who's day job is to run a high-tech production machine shop, manufacturing oil tools here in Alberta. We've enjoyed shooting our mini-14's together enough that he also caught interest in the Blackout Mini, and committed to putting his considerabe skills and machining capacity behind the project....so it was time to look for barrels!
That proved to be more frustrating that one would have thought...after waiting for months (after being told it would only take a couple weeks), I expanded our search scope and was surprised to learn that there is a barrel maker operating right here in Alberta! Ron Smith works from his amazing workshop out on his family farm less than an hour north of Calgary. Amazing! After a couple of phone calls, he agreed to make me three .308 diameter 416 Stainless rifled barrel blanks. We settled on a 1 in 9 twist, for reasons I can explain later.
Boy was I excited when I got the call inviting me to drive up and pick up the barrels! But that excitement paled by comparison to how I felt when I opened the door to his shop and walked in for the first time. There stood Ron, labouring over his rifling machine as he put the finishing touches on my last barrel blank:
He spent about an hour with me touring me through his shop, and it was FANTASTIC. He told me that he personally made the rifling machine about 45 years ago, and that he's cut rifling on many, many thousands of barrels over the years.
This is the machine he uses to gun-drill the stainless blank, and then chase it with a reamer to make sure the hole is perfect.
And here are the finished barrels (with a couple more laying there ready for their new owners):
It was pretty much the most awesome experience I've had this year, and I'm super grateful to have lucked out and found such an interesting guy. I can hardly wait to drive back out to show him the finished project...
More to follow in Part II....
Brobee
PART I
For whatever reason, I LOVE the mini-14/30 platform as an all-purpose semi-auto rifle. I gleefully play with my .223 guns shooting my run&gun course from 400meters down to 100 meters on Steel Silhouettes, and I've enjoyed boar and deer hunting with both the 7.62x39 and 6.8SPC guns.
One thing that's troubled me about the 7.62x39 guns though are the magazines. The factory 5 round mag seems to always have trouble with the last round, and while I've never needed it hunting it's always bugged me. I also did not like that I had to have two stashes of expensive mags....factory 5/20s for the .223 and factory 5/20s for the 7.62x39 (with no factory 5/20s available fo rthe 6.8SPC). Then when the 300AAC blackout started taking off I was pretty interested...I might be able to standardize my magazines, and brass supply could be simplified significantly too if I could get set up to make cases from .223.
So early in the year I got motivated and set out to try. I first tackled brass, and some will remember threads I posted on my process early on. It's become quite a bit more efficient now, but brass is not the focus of this thread...
I'm lucky enough to have a good shooting buddy who's day job is to run a high-tech production machine shop, manufacturing oil tools here in Alberta. We've enjoyed shooting our mini-14's together enough that he also caught interest in the Blackout Mini, and committed to putting his considerabe skills and machining capacity behind the project....so it was time to look for barrels!
That proved to be more frustrating that one would have thought...after waiting for months (after being told it would only take a couple weeks), I expanded our search scope and was surprised to learn that there is a barrel maker operating right here in Alberta! Ron Smith works from his amazing workshop out on his family farm less than an hour north of Calgary. Amazing! After a couple of phone calls, he agreed to make me three .308 diameter 416 Stainless rifled barrel blanks. We settled on a 1 in 9 twist, for reasons I can explain later.
Boy was I excited when I got the call inviting me to drive up and pick up the barrels! But that excitement paled by comparison to how I felt when I opened the door to his shop and walked in for the first time. There stood Ron, labouring over his rifling machine as he put the finishing touches on my last barrel blank:
He spent about an hour with me touring me through his shop, and it was FANTASTIC. He told me that he personally made the rifling machine about 45 years ago, and that he's cut rifling on many, many thousands of barrels over the years.
This is the machine he uses to gun-drill the stainless blank, and then chase it with a reamer to make sure the hole is perfect.
And here are the finished barrels (with a couple more laying there ready for their new owners):
It was pretty much the most awesome experience I've had this year, and I'm super grateful to have lucked out and found such an interesting guy. I can hardly wait to drive back out to show him the finished project...
More to follow in Part II....
Brobee





















































