Is a .750 stainless stock too small to make one for a 5.56? It would leave bout a quarter inch wall if Im correct
@kevinburns83437 ай бұрын
great video/ does anyone make barrel blocks for sale/ would hard wood work/ you used oil and brush would white lithium grease work better than the oil/ any information would be appreciated thank you
@ccfirearms Жыл бұрын
I know this is old but what lathe is that? Thanks
@bussi7859 Жыл бұрын
Soooooo booooooooring
@neilwatson45622 жыл бұрын
Easily as professional as at my job
@mybuck20102 жыл бұрын
Kennametal?
@glenpaul36062 жыл бұрын
Confused. What is that device you built? A muzzle brake is to reduce recoil by directing gases rearward at an angle pushing the rifle forward to oppose the rearward recoil. It only has angled ports on each side and none on top or bottom. Not sure what your build is supposed to do.
@Njazmo2 жыл бұрын
Most muzzle brakes direct gases sideways, just like this one. Those bigger oval holes are side holes, round holes are on top. If you direct gases backwards, the bang will be much louder to the shooter, and it's unpleasant. Maybe you've watched too much 50 BMG muzzle brakes?
@christopherdrekr10783 жыл бұрын
What kind of gun is this for if you don't mind me asking ? That's great work but woooh it's huge ! It looks like something you would use for testing not exactly something you would want to be carrying around.
@alsatian91303 жыл бұрын
Great work SKI !!! You family should be very proud of you. Keep up your family and your machining .... (when you get the time!)
@frankvagas38533 жыл бұрын
One question, how much does the envelope have for a short gun, I mean turn by length, and how many stretch marks?
@factdesignbr3 жыл бұрын
love ur vids. keep on posting
@johnwhauserman3 жыл бұрын
Dude you may joke about this my son started off in crayon, but ended up a degreed engineer.
@TyrantExterminator17763 жыл бұрын
Do a video on building a Suppressor, We are a FREE PEOPLE we DO NOT have to have another HUMANS SPECIAL PERMISSION, or pay money to for a little PERMISSION SLIP. TO OWN ANYTHING or make ANYTHING PERIOD.
@AasedYamaha4 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/door/VechYyvzioEwZcW5iNMEBQ
@ОлександрСанталов4 жыл бұрын
????????????
@eodwr07094 жыл бұрын
Just found your video, great job! How do you finish the front of your breaks?
@zanelile81924 жыл бұрын
Question sir - i have a WW 11 Japanese rifle - an uncle brought 2 home 1 for him & 1 for my dad. A man was to re-bore for ammo USA type, he messed the barrel up. Should I try to have it re-bored again are change barrel's ?
@Thomas-qg7vy4 жыл бұрын
World war eleven?
@kieranh20054 жыл бұрын
@@Thomas-qg7vy I think he means II as in the Roman numerals. I'd say rebarrel. Is it a 6.5mm or 7.7mm? The common mod for those rifles in 6.5mm was rechamber with a .257 Roberts reamer, making it a 6.5/257.
@evaserna95805 жыл бұрын
*these are great fly just like my target tips>>>**allabout.wiki/irm9** Both the practice and the swhacker broad head weight the same so they are a great match .There so good with my crossbow I am shooting them at 10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80, right now.*
@chriscorbett50665 жыл бұрын
Good for advice!!! Thank you
@royboone36185 жыл бұрын
“8”9
@chuckyoung83435 жыл бұрын
what a technology is
@haywoodchablomi80375 жыл бұрын
Been trying to find this answer for a while. Can anyone tell the specific name of the tool that is used to cut vents in an A2 Birdcage? Tapered milling saw doesn't get me any results.
@conormcgregor.73335 жыл бұрын
Are you looking for a keyseat cutter?
@haywoodchablomi80375 жыл бұрын
@@conormcgregor.7333 Yes, thank you. Keyseat cutter with corner radius. I could not find this anywhere, thank you.
@brianwekesa50674 жыл бұрын
Eer
@Anthsv85 жыл бұрын
Hi can you tell me the amount of clearance between the ID of the brake and the OD of the Bullet? Thanks for the Video great skills you have!!
@jacqueskisling82415 жыл бұрын
Nice work sir
@jeffcreller82625 жыл бұрын
Man, that is a thing of beauty.....
@pjcarter84496 жыл бұрын
What rotary table are you using? I like the automatic stops, makes things much easier.
@connordoyle95826 жыл бұрын
Anyone have a homemade 9mm barrel they will sell and post to me
@Boon2026 жыл бұрын
Great job Sir!
@panchovilla14866 жыл бұрын
I hope you're doing okay we haven't seen some videos God bless
@francorui24936 жыл бұрын
I hope oneday you Will make a barrel for me regards
@rufusleers6 жыл бұрын
Pac nars customer service sucks!
@vinnyha57936 жыл бұрын
The King..... i’m a Mechanic guy... lol... i cut brake... but i tell you it’s nothing like this... you guys is amazing.... Amazing work.... i love it... i really really enjoy watching that machine cut off that barrel... i love that ... i really really enjoy it guy.... i can spent all my my free time watching video like this... i just love that machine... thank you guy....
@carlpolk8116 жыл бұрын
My friend has a $3000.00 308 rifle with a factory muzzle brake, mostly cosmetics. when I fired it, the blow back was like someone boxed both of my ears. That was from the first shot. And I had ear plugs on too. So I machined the muzzle break into a thread protector, now all the blast is forward and the rifle shot a whole lot more accurately. No blow back.
@carlpolk8116 жыл бұрын
does a muzzle break really have to seem so complex. It's like reloading, the muzzle break needs to be custom for the specific caliber. Factory loads, custom loads, and how the rifle torque. Up, down, left or right. And of course, gas pressures, and no blow back from muzzle to shooter. So a few need to be made and tested until the rifle shoots accurate, reduced recoil, and definitely no blow back.
@JDude-uj3lk6 жыл бұрын
I believe he made this barrel block for one of these types of guns. kzbin.info/www/bejne/bKLEpZlrnJyfsM0
@yiyom87306 жыл бұрын
muy buen trabajo!!!!!! felicitaciones
@deeremeyer17496 жыл бұрын
That major undercut at the "front" of the barrel thread cut to get rid of a minor "fillet" the recoil lug should have been chamfered to clear is scary as hell. Ever heard of stress risers and how they are set up and cause fractures at sharp edges when an undercut "shaft" is subjected to bending stresses? They're why you never see bearing retention snap rings except outside a bearing and only on shafts where there is no pulley or other bending load outboard of the groove. Where those exist a lock collar is used to keep the shaft from slidding/spinning in the bearing. I can see that barrel snapping right there in that groove someday. And aren't the recoil lug flats supposed to line up with the receiver flats for a "seamless" assembly with the barrel tight? There's no way you got it tightened another 1/8 of a turn or more torquing the barrel into the receiver to get everything lined up. At least not without stressing that undercut barrel and groove a hell of a lot more than they already were. All the way around a pretty scary and "ugly" build to this point. I know lots of machinists and no "gunsmiths" personally even though it seems like everybody who has and can turn on a freaking lathe and can make a KZbin video is a "gunsmith" or "rifle builder" these days. With predictable results. Looks really easy on paper but oddly enough threads have to start and stop at specific points in many "builds" to get all the parts "clocked" correctly, don't they? But its kind of hard to cut those kinds of threads and get them to start and stop where they have to when you're just kicking the lathe on at 500 rpm and letting the compound "do the work". I suppose its just a matter of taking "a few more thou" off the rear barrel "seating surface" to get another turn or whatever you need to get things lined up properly. But then you have to take more off the back of the "chamber" and if you don't get it right in one or two tries, the next thing you know you're back to cutting more threads. You mentioned "advancing the threads" but with the receiver and recoil lug already tight against the barrel more threads aren't going to gain you anything. You have to create clearance somewhere to get the receiver and recoil lug aligned when they're tight against the barrel. Either by removing some material from the face of the receiver or the recoil lug or the rear of the barrel where the recoil lug sits. And if that's an Armalite AR-30 receiver which is must be since its obviously not an AR-50, are you sure its up to the challenge of dealing with .375 CheyTac pressures and loads? More "scary" to think about there. Looks like a "cheap" way to build a "big "rifle and "cheap" shouldn't be combined with "build" of ANY rifle much less a "big" one. Hopefully Armalite's lawyers will find this video if there's ever an "issue" with that "build" and somebody decides to pin the blame for the "issue" on Armalite. Not that Armalite would/will need to prove it didn't "build" the rifle with "issues". In its manufacturing/transfer records whatever serial number is on that receiver sure as hell isn't going to match a .375 CheyTac and "truing" the receiver just put the proof of "modifications" right there in the threads. And is it just me or do those barrel threads "taper" from "larger" to "smaller" as the get further onto the barrel blank? Almost looks like a reversed pipe taper thread and the receiver seems to get "looser" the further on you thread it. Maybe those are "optical illusions".
@archangel200316 жыл бұрын
I thought you said you were going to add a picture of the other gun he made with your other barrel block at the end?
@deeremeyer17496 жыл бұрын
Any issues using twist drills without continuous coolant in aluminum like that? And with a "perfect fit" over the barrel as you said at 5:41, why would you go bigger with the bore? Kinda makes it impossible to end up with a concentric bore when clamped on the barrel, doesn't it? Slotting and clamping that barrel block vs. just installing it with set screws to prevent movement of the block on the barrel the way AR gas blocks are fitted seems kind of counter-intuitive. Especially since a tight, clamped fit would make it hard for the barrel to expand when hot. Looks like one hell of thick and heavy chunk of aluminum to get "compressed" with the clamp screws, too. What is the purpose of a "barrel block" anyway?
@samueldamewood52736 жыл бұрын
He was brushing on cutting lube all through the drilling
@deeremeyer17496 жыл бұрын
The diameter difference between lands and grooves is under .0001"? How did that .408 CheyTac in an AR-30 receiver project work out?
@deeremeyer17496 жыл бұрын
.408 Chey-Tac with a COL in excess of 4.5" will fit in an AR-30 receiver/magazine lengthwise? That's about 7/8" longer than .338 Lapua. How you pulling that off? Got a pretty significant case diameter difference to deal with too. AR-50s are available in .416 Barrett for the same money ($3300ish MSRP) as an AR-50 in .50 BMG. How does building a custom "AR-30" in .408 CheyTac pencil out compared to buying an off-the-shelf AR-50 chambered for a much better cartridge based on a much better "parent case"?
@johnnyholland87656 жыл бұрын
Looks like it grew there man.....Just like it grew there.
@yishenglee78586 жыл бұрын
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@precisionmachineshed7 жыл бұрын
Not the way I would do it. My main concern would be re-indexing the brake on the outside of the barrel. You are changing pressures by varying depth of the ports from one side to the other. It's easy enough to blend the brake into the barrel especially if you were only a couple thou out. I've also lost CHUNKS of skin running my finger on running parts!
@reecedonovan82247 жыл бұрын
Amazing work you do
@multiHappyHacker7 жыл бұрын
You could use a key seat cutter for those ports, I think that's the way to go so you don't have such small end-mills that like to break off. even more helpful if it's a small brake.
@Boon2027 жыл бұрын
Great Work!
@dinaali46338 жыл бұрын
coooooooooooool work do you do full gun with details I mean how can I make a gun from no think starting from body ending to parts even small parts ???
@bigjimar778 жыл бұрын
Looks great!
@bigjimar778 жыл бұрын
For safety reasons you should always have your sand paper or Emory cloth on the opposite side of you pulling toward you. So if it breaks you will go back away from the chuck.