My old faithful A bolt has been in need of a new barrel for may years. After hearing all of the horror stories about broken actions and locktite I decided that if someone was going to break it, it might as well be me. I found a factory new threaded barrel with a short chamber and figured why not, I can hand chamber it.
Action wrench received, new barrel in hand. I cleaned the action screw hole and scope mount holes out, drenched in Kroll overnight. Put it in the vise and attached the wrench. Spun right off. No galling at all. The problem? My action is an old 20 tpi thread patter, the new barrel is 32tpi. Defeated. I can have the new barrel turned down and rethreaded at 20 tpi with about 4 thousandths of an inch to spare.
In the meantime, I contacted my old smith. He left town without telling me but had a youngster that took over his shop. I called around a bit to see if anyone else is available. One smith is out with health problems, another isn't taking work for the foreseeable future. So back to the youngster I went. He isn't comfortable with spinning the factory barrel down. So I pulled a Proof barrel out of storage and upgraded my plans a bit. So, he asked me what caliber. I said .284. He says that's a good old caliber, but he didn't have a reamer for it. No problem, I brought along a 7 rem mag finishing reamer. He tells me that is the wrong caliber. See where I am going here? How come I am nervous when the youngster doesn't know the difference between caliber and cartridge?
Anyway, I left it in good hands. We will see how this turns out. Everyone deserves a chance to screw up, right?
Action wrench received, new barrel in hand. I cleaned the action screw hole and scope mount holes out, drenched in Kroll overnight. Put it in the vise and attached the wrench. Spun right off. No galling at all. The problem? My action is an old 20 tpi thread patter, the new barrel is 32tpi. Defeated. I can have the new barrel turned down and rethreaded at 20 tpi with about 4 thousandths of an inch to spare.
In the meantime, I contacted my old smith. He left town without telling me but had a youngster that took over his shop. I called around a bit to see if anyone else is available. One smith is out with health problems, another isn't taking work for the foreseeable future. So back to the youngster I went. He isn't comfortable with spinning the factory barrel down. So I pulled a Proof barrel out of storage and upgraded my plans a bit. So, he asked me what caliber. I said .284. He says that's a good old caliber, but he didn't have a reamer for it. No problem, I brought along a 7 rem mag finishing reamer. He tells me that is the wrong caliber. See where I am going here? How come I am nervous when the youngster doesn't know the difference between caliber and cartridge?
Anyway, I left it in good hands. We will see how this turns out. Everyone deserves a chance to screw up, right?