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Gunsmithing School me on measuring an action for a barrel Tennon

ajdemar215

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Minuteman
Jun 8, 2017
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I should say up front, im becoming quite proficient on my lathe but I’m no machinist. I feel I’m ready to start practicing on threading mock barrels for actions and build up some confidence before I plunge into an actual blank. I have a few questions and was hoping y’all could help a dude out.

1. What is recommended the distance from the bolt nose from the barrel tenon? Is every action/tenon different?

2. What is the typical case protrusion from the barrel tenon?

3. When measuring an action for a shouldered barrel, do you just need the distance from action face to bolt nose then ream the chamber to proper headspace?

Thanks for any advice you can give, I’m open to hear all you have to say.
 
#1 - usually .010” it shouldn’t touch barrel. I’ve seen some tenon diagrams say as much as .045”
#2 - depends what action your cutting for.
#3 - there is a tenon worksheet on Brownells you can download and use for measurements.
I headspace by tightening action on go gage with bolt closed, use feeler gages between action and barrel shoulder to measure how much more you need to go.
Tighten action on feeler gage then feel bolt close or not. Once you’re done, keep in mind, you will have around .001” + crush depending on how many ftlbs you tighten action to.
I’m sure you’ll do fine with it. I think there is a sticky post with some YouTube videos at top of gunsmith page also.
 
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I should have specified what action, this project would be for a Ruger American. I’d like to do a shouldered barrel just because. Since there isn’t a counterbore, would case protrusion be determined by the distance between the bolt nose and bolt faceplus the distance from the nose to barrel?

Say I’m 10 thou from bolt nose to barrel tenon and I have a bolt nose to bolt face measurements of .055, would my theorieticle case protrusion be .065?
 
I have not chambered a Ruger American, but on Remington 700 style bolts, and customs like the 700, case is about flush with end of barrel, usually within few thou. With flat bolts, case sticks out a bit. Just did a couple Kelbly’s actions with flat bolt and I’m wanting to say they were around.130” protrusion of case.
It has a protrusion figure on work sheet.
If it’s flat nose bolt, you will have a bit of case sticking out of barrel. Once you start doing it and see what’s going on it’s pretty self explanatory.
 
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Do you have a good depth micrometer? With bolt in action measure to bolt face and subtract between .001 and .002 for crush this is your headspace depth. With bolt in action measure to bolt bolt nose, subtract .010, this is tennon length, fit cone breech/counterbore/flat breech as needed and dont forget to add in recoil lug thickness to tennon length on actions that use them.
 
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You need a bit more knowledge before embarking on this journey. A good read available from Manson Reamers. Also if you can find someone that will let you look over there shoulder and watch helps a lot.

The Complete Illustrated Guide to Precision Rifle Barrel Fitting By John Hinnant
 
@skinnj1 yes I do! Thanks for the reply, that was pretty to the point and just what I needed.

@DAVETOOLEY agreed, I’ve done lots of short chambered barrels and pre fits so I’m relatively familiar with headspace and chambering. Just exceptionally novice when it involves turning a blank into a barrel. I’ll have to find that book and give it a read, thank you!
 
I should say up front, im becoming quite proficient on my lathe but I’m no machinist. I feel I’m ready to start practicing on threading mock barrels for actions and build up some confidence before I plunge into an actual blank. I have a few questions and was hoping y’all could help a dude out.

1. What is recommended the distance from the bolt nose from the barrel tenon? Is every action/tenon different?

2. What is the typical case protrusion from the barrel tenon?

3. When measuring an action for a shouldered barrel, do you just need the distance from action face to bolt nose then ream the chamber to proper headspace?

Thanks for any advice you can give, I’m open to hear all you have to say.


I'll try and help.

There's three different basic tools that I use for doing this.

1. A depth micrometer with the appropriate stylus for the required reach. Generally, a 0-1" range will work.
2. A 1-2 inch micrometer that hasn't been used as a C clamp
3. A pair of calipers, 0-6" range


Numbers:

1. Ensure your action is tore down into two primary components, The receiver and the bolt. No springs in the bolt. We want it "dumb".
2. Throw the bolt into the receiver and roll it into battery (closed)
3. Measure from the face of the receiver to the highest point on the bolt. On an M700 this would be the nose projecting off the forward side of the bolts lug features. Record that value.
4. Now measure to the top side of the bolt's lug faces. Record that value as well.

For sake of simplicity, we'll say value from #3 is .9 and the value of #4 is 1.0. This would give you a .100" difference.

If this were real and I was doing it, I'd take the 1" value, add the thickness of the recoi lug (again, assuming an M700 type action where it's a "washer" stuck between the barrel/receiver), then subtract .01" from that total number. So, if your using a .250" lug for instance, you'd end up with 1.0+.250='s 1.250-.01"

1.240" would be your ultimate tennon length as measured from shoulder of barrel to the face where your threads start. .01" provides the clearance so the bolt doesn't wipe the face of the barrel.

Now, take the 1.24 value and subtract the .100" from it to know how deep to go on your counterbore. The .01 is already factored in. This would be the actual breech clearance (I guess).

On most M700's the value actually hovers around .150-.155. If you add .01 to that then you would figure on having .160-.165 as your value for unsupported case. (meaning how much is dangling out of the chamber on the barrel. If you take some brass and slice it in half, you'll find you are well in front of the thinwall portion of the case web. You really gotta goof it bad for the brass to fail at this value.

Headspace.

There's a bunch of ways to do this. I like dumb, simple stuff. If I know that an M700 is setup so that the case head is basically flush with the face of the barrel and my reamer has a witness mark for the case head location, then its a pretty simple task of just laying a 6" scale along the length of the tool and measuring from the tip of the pilot screw to that mark. Lets say it's exactly 3.5".

Setup your reamer however you do and set a zero point. What would do in a manual lathe is just have a gauge block of a known thickness handy. It can be anything. Squash it between the end of the tennon and the tip of the reamer. Zero your stuff, remove the block, advance it by that thickness, then zero again.

So, you start chewing your hole in the barrel for the chamber. At say, 3.250" depth (roughly a quarter inch from the estimated target depth) I'd stop, clear any swarf, stuff a GO Gauge in the bore, and thread the lug, receiver, and install the bolt. Screw em on until it snugs up. Not silly tight, just firm contact. You should see a gap between forward side of lug and the shoulder. Measure that gap. In my shop I have a .01-.06 set of gauge pins. First time around I'll grab the calibers and get a "knotted string" distance to go. We'll save the gauge pins for once were under the .06" value.

Once there, we just start sticking pins in the gap until one sticks, yet allows the bolt to just barely open freely. In our example of ".250 to go" lets pretend the value was actually .241". If this were me, I'd go .241" + an additional .002" to .003" (what your doing is trying to anticipate how much your threads will load up once you torque everything down. At 100lbsft on the torque wrench with copper antisieze and a "good" thread fit (not super slopply loose, but not requiring a pipe wrench either, just "silky" in feel) it'll typicaly pull up .002" to .003" on a SS barrel.

Ok, so you get this all done, screw it all together, throw a gauge in it, and the bolt closes on the GO, but sticks on the NO GO. Great. One more thing I do. I have a tin full of .03" solder cut up in little snips. Stick one of those pieces to the bolt using some grease or antisieze. With the barrel torqued up fully, throw the gauge back in it. Now chase the bolt in behind it. LUBE the lugs! Now, using some forward pressure on the bolt handle, roll it into battery. You are squishing the solder. Pull the bolt, recover the solder, then measure how thick it is. That is your "no shit" value for headspace over the GO Gauge. Here, we call this "GO plus .001" or whatever. Attempting to keep it conservative (under .002") generally helps with brass life as you avoid excessive case web growth. (assuming the brass is setup properly of course)

The thing to keep in mind here is the tool. Reamers are ground on a taper along the body. That means the body is growing as it heads rearward. If your brass is meant to be in the low ".470's" (a typical value for most 30-06 case head diameter cartridges) yet you go plunge an extra .005" on the depth and choose to ignore it, the brass will still likely shoot. The issue is the back of the case is now encouraged to grow.

Guys used to do this all the time on Dashers by just cramming the BR reamer the extra depth, then could not figure out why the cases were splitting.

Hope this helps. Its not hard to do. Maybe buy some round stock and just practice threading. That is far more challenging than the reaming part imo when doing it manually. I would also look at insert grades made for "hard turning". The chip load is much less than a typical insert used for production stuff. You'll be able to sneak up on pitch diameters much easier and avoid work hardening the threads while doing so.

Last, if you are using an M16xtr on the bolt, ensure the Id of the breech ring has enough room for it to slip over the case rim. Very common "newb" goof. Qualify it with a piece of brass before pulling the barrel. It'll save your bacon!

Good luck.

C.
 
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@LongRifles Inc. daaaaanngg maybe you should write a book, I’d buy it. Thanks for the info and the little tricks, I’ve never heard the solder squish trick before! That’s slick!
 
Working on it... "Modern Gunsmithing". Something I've pondered for a long time.

I have to say that would be worth the read. I've enjoyed reading your posts on gunsmithing, you are very helpful and are not afraid to share your knowledge. It's one of the reasons I like following you guys on Facebook besides seeing some of the projects you put on there. Not many people like you when it comes to this stuff and the willingness to take the time to post this stuff.
 
Hey dudes, thought I’d revive this old dead thread. Just wanted to tell you guys thanks, I can’t tell y’all how many times I’ve re-read your responses and focused on every word each one of you said. Almost three years in the making and this week I finished out and put the first rounds through my first tube I chambered myself. Is it the best? No. But it’s my first go and it shoots pretty well for a green mountain and 6.5 130eldm hand loads from a different rifle. 10 groups combined average just under .7 best group being .32 and worst being .8.
Arc nucleus
Timney hit
Green mountain 9 twist 6.5 chromoly
Bell and Carlson comp stick
Grayboe bottom metal
again, I just wanted to say thanks for sharing y’all’s wisdom with a young stranger. I know it takes time.
 

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Hey dudes, thought I’d revive this old dead thread. Just wanted to tell you guys thanks, I can’t tell y’all how many times I’ve re-read your responses and focused on every word each one of you said. Almost three years in the making and this week I finished out and put the first rounds through my first tube I chambered myself. Is it the best? No. But it’s my first go and it shoots pretty well for a green mountain and 6.5 130eldm hand loads from a different rifle. 10 groups combined average just under .7 best group being .32 and worst being .8.
Arc nucleus
Timney hit
Green mountain 9 twist 6.5 chromoly
Bell and Carlson comp stick
Grayboe bottom metal
again, I just wanted to say thanks for sharing y’all’s wisdom with a young stranger. I know it takes time.
I just started doing my own barrels.
Pretty rewarding isn’t it?

What was your forward of lug to boltface dimension?
 
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Good job. I'd choke up closer to the chuck, if you're comfortable with that. More rigid allowing for heavier cuts, less tool/material deflection, better surface finish, less likely to chatter, etc.

I don't know anything about the Arc Nucleus, but I'd be careful of any excessive unsupported brass case head/case wall. If it's a flat-faced bolt and you're close to the barrel breech (~.010") end you're probably fine so long as you didn't put a huge chamfer/radius on the corner of the chamber.
 
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I just started doing my own barrels.
Pretty rewarding isn’t it?

What was your forward of lug to boltface dimension?
It is! Already got a blank for another cal just chomping at the bit to chamber another. This tennon was weird, it just seemed so short in comparison to a 700. After consulting with a couple other smiths over my math and measurements we all agreed it was right. If I remember right is was .637 tenon length, leaving .488 for threads after the lug
 

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Good job. I'd choke up closer to the chuck, if you're comfortable with that. More rigid allowing for heavier cuts, less tool/material deflection, better surface finish, less likely to chatter, etc.

I don't know anything about the Arc Nucleus, but I'd be careful of any excessive unsupported brass case head/case wall. If it's a flat-faced bolt and you're close to the barrel breech (~.010") end you're probably fine so long as you didn't put a huge chamfer/radius on the corner of the chamber.
Thank you! I’ll be honest, after seeing all the posts from Jim see about excessive chamber chamfer and things of that nature, I just hit the face with some Emory cloth. It feeds great, brass isnt scratched. The case is fully supported and breech face meets the beginning of the case extractor groove perfectly. .151 protrusion per my Reamer/saami print.

edit: I forgot to mention, you’re the 3rd person to tell me to chamber closer to the chuck. I will most certainly be doing that on the next barrel, thank you for the advice!
 
It is! Already got a blank for another cal just chomping at the bit to chamber another. This tennon was weird, it just seemed so short in comparison to a 700. After consulting with a couple other smiths over my math and measurements we all agreed it was right. If I remember right is was .637 tenon length, leaving .488 for threads after the lug
I’ve done two barrels for my Nuke.
.825( mine measured .8254) -.134 of exposed case to reveal extraction grove for a tenon length of .691.

DFBE98C9-2655-46E1-AFE1-5F3224A89145.jpeg
 
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I’ve done two barrels for my Nuke.
.825( mine measured .8254) -.134 of exposed case to reveal extraction grove for a tenon length of .691.

View attachment 7605178
What is the distance from the bolt face to the receiver on your Nucleus? I chambered an Archimedes and it measured .824 from front of the reciever to the bolt face. So I did headspace at .820 in order to compensate for crush and to have a little gap for wiggle room in a field rifle.
Just curious is all.
 
What is the distance from the bolt face to the receiver on your Nucleus? I chambered an Archimedes and it measured .824 from front of the reciever to the bolt face. So I did headspace at .820 in order to compensate for crush and to have a little gap for wiggle room in a field rifle.
Just curious is all.
Mine was .8254 from boltface to outside edge of the lug on my Nuke.
The print I have says .825 +/- .002.
 
Mine was .8254 from boltface to outside edge of the lug on my Nuke.
The print I have says .825 +/- .002.
The .825 +/- .002 is the action dimension tolerance. I asked ARC because it looks like a headspace callout on print. They told me it was the action dimension.