• Thanks to everyone who joined The Shot You’ll Never Forget Giveaway!

    We'll be announcing the winner early next week, keep an eye out!

    See the contest

Gunsmithing Polishing New Chambers

Everyone I do. During the life span of the reamer the finish changes. Also not all reamers cut the same when new. Below is the face of a flute in the body area.

1534160634381.png
1534160634381.png
 
  • Like
Reactions: Steelnecktie
I woudnt call call it a polish, but I smooth them out. Easy to do, and doesn’t change dimensions at all. I think the theory that the case needs to grip the walls is somewhat true, but wildly overstated generally. I’m new at this so maybe I’m wrong, but I can’t detect any negatives. Brass sure comes out looking nice.
 

Attachments

  • 89E4F85C-86B7-40F8-BEDF-8BA1B02F4F1C.jpeg
    89E4F85C-86B7-40F8-BEDF-8BA1B02F4F1C.jpeg
    735.2 KB · Views: 188
Do you find it flows less up neck in length if chamber is not polished like a mirror?
I think brass flow has more to do with shoulder angle and how well the FL die and chamber match up. I don't have a mirror finish in my chambers but I polish enough that I don't violate rule #1. That means don't do anything to make the phone ring. Rings on brass make the phone ring. The roughest part of the chamber is the shoulder area. So if a rougher finish is supposed to prevent brass flow, it's not working for me.
 
ive done tests with lapping and polishing chambers......didnt notice any difference in accuracy.

i just use a nice fresh chamber reamer, cut it, and leave it.

if my reamer is leaving a shitty chamber.....time to get a new one.....