So I have some Alfa precision barrels inbound for the RTI Prophet (needs a transfer hole 15mm OD) and L2 (not a problem 14mm OD). How would I index to know where the transfer port should be drilled or can the gunsmith do this on a bench?
I always machine the breech fitment first, that done minus transfer port. Fit barrel to breech and then rotate barrel 360* AND Note "IF" OR "WHERE" barrel at muzzle gets highest at 12 o'clock position. felt pin mark barrel next to receiver. Then when placing transfer port do so 180* from the mark.
FYI ....
I did not understand that. Can you explain in a little more detail please?!!!I always machine the breech fitment first, that done minus transfer port. Fit barrel to breech and then rotate barrel 360* AND Note "IF" OR "WHERE" barrel at muzzle gets highest at 12 o'clock position. felt pin mark barrel next to receiver. Then when placing transfer port do so 180* from the mark.
FYI ....
You do not need to shoot it. If you rotate the barrel in the action you will see the bore will basically be wobbling. Find the spot where it is the highest at 12 o clock. That is where you would want the barrel to be. The transfer port would be 180 degrees from that. Its as good as you can get with a barrel that has a transfer port it in. Thats why I like the indexable sleeve/transfer port methodCan you explain in a little more
A simple measuring or visual of the barrels run out at muzzle. "IF" run out is present ? Clock it to the 12' o'clock position applying transfer & set screw flat accordingly.I did not understand that. Can you explain in a little more detail please?!!!
I'm doing a project and will be putting an Alpha Precision barrel blank into a Fх.
How to determine the position of the blank as it is not possible to shoot and see the hits after rotation tests at 12, 3, 6 and 9 o'clock?
Thanks for the answer, but I still can't understand what you want to say, probably the translator is not doing his job. Please try with more words. I dare to say that during the time that I have spent with the hobby, I have created many things and I have helped many people in Bulgaria regarding pcp pneumatics and installation of different barrels in such rifles, but ... nevertheless, I do not understand what you told me and I would like you to explain it in detail, it seems important to me !!!A simple measuring or visual of the barrels run out at muzzle. "IF" run out is present ? Clock it to the 12' o'clock position applying transfer & set screw flat accordingly.
Thank you. However, I can't understand the first 3 sentences of what you wrote. How does a barrel rotate in motion and which bore is wobbly ??? Do you mean to roll the barrel on a flat surface and look at the front and end where the projectile exits when fired???You do not need to shoot it. If you rotate the barrel in the action you will see the bore will basically be wobbling. Find the spot where it is the highest at 12 o clock. That is where you would want the barrel to be. The transfer port would be 180 degrees from that. Its as good as you can get with a barrel that has a transfer port it in. Thats why I like the indexable sleeve/transfer port method
Friends, either I'm not explaining well or you can't understand what I'm asking unfortunately !!! Let me try again, now in more detail. You probably know what the beginning of the Fx barrel is, the bronze detail with the transfer port that is wound on the tube with a thickness of φ13.6 mm. In my case, when I have to roll this part onto the machined rear of the Alpha Precision blank, how do you think I can assemble it to the barrel box (receiver) and be able to rotate the blank to determine the front highest position??? You do realize that the moment the blank thread is cut and the bronze piece is put in, the blank will already have a certain position to the receiver and it can no longer rotate because it has a precise position on the transfer port, how is it supposed to rotate the blank in the receiver and it will be possible to determine the highest point in front? Doesn't the bronze detail entering the receiver have a blocking zone at its beginning which determines the position of the transfer port? I don't see how this indexing can be done, I think it is possible only fh liners, where there is a rotating nut that tightens the liner in its tube!!!
There are definitely ways to trick yourself with a badly considered setup. If you want to test your setup, find what you think is the index, mark it discretely, then break the setup and do it again to see if you get the same answer. If you do, you can proceed with relative confidence. If you don't, there's an issue with the setup (like you're flexing the barrel). Sorry for being vague - how you go about it depends a great deal on your lathe.Interesting, didn't think that measuring indicator run-out on the barrel or bore would properly show the bias. Figured that there were too many variables (depending on where the barrel was supported, how many places and how it was rotated) to be valid.
I always test-shoot to determine the high side.
Cheers!
You beat me to it. The likelihood of the Outer diameter of the barrel being concentric with the bore is always suspect. While Inches matter, 0.001 matter more.Better is to place a close-fitting pin in the barrel and indicate off that. Deltronics sells pin sets that are +/- 0.001" around a nominal diameter in 0.0001" increments. There is little point indicating the outside of the barrel.
GsT