• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Barrel Maker

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
John Taylor said:
FL-Flinter said:
I'm not, John Taylor is - RE: JT's post about the 12L14 .300 win mag barrel above.
I didn't say I was for it, I said that Jerry Cunningham made the barrel and it worked good in his testing. I never saw the barrel, I'm going on what he told me about it.

C'mon John, I finally get blame mentioning the unmentionables on someone else for a change ... don't be raining on my parade. :wink: :wink: :grin:
 
What I have found is that the gun builders & distributers want such a deep discount on barrels that it is hard to make wages. Then they want 90 - 120 days to pay. Building quality barrel machinery won't be cheap.
 
Here's a picture of my machine. Hard to see everything in one picture. It has a 3/4 HP motor to run the carriage to and fro, A sine bar for the rate of twist, automatic indexing for 6 and 8 with manual 2,3,and4. Carriage and sine bar rides on Teflon. Ways are made from 2X2 box tubing. Spindle has 4 bolt spider at both ends and rides in ball bearings. I did have it set up to run automatic but I need to be there to blow the chips out so I disconnected that part.
IMGP1480.jpg
 
Back side. All the rods in the chip pan have different size cuter boxes for different bore sizes.
Any questions, feel free to ask.
Riflingmachine3s.jpg
 
Your shop looks like mine, Too much tools,stock ,and junk to have room for a good picture. You never have enough room in a shop, any extra room just sucks material and tools into the vacum. Do you have a rack and pinon or just run the sine plate on rollers? Is that a bridgeport set up with an indexing head for cutting the flats in the backkground :idunno: :idunno:
 
ohio ramrod said:
Your shop looks like mine, Too much tools,stock ,and junk to have room for a good picture. You never have enough room in a shop, any extra room just sucks material and tools into the vacum. Do you have a rack and pinon or just run the sine plate on rollers? Is that a bridgeport set up with an indexing head for cutting the flats in the backkground :idunno: :idunno:

When I built it I didn't have a rack and pinion but I had some #35 chain and a couple sprockets so I used two rows of chain and two sprockets for the pinion. I staggered them so one tooth would be fully engaged while the other tooth was just entering the chain. I put adjusting bolts on both ends of the chains.
The mill is a Bridgeport clone. The indexing head is probably set up to do the front integral sight on an early Winchester model 70 barrel. I have a horizontal mill for making octagon barrels
A clean shop is a sure sign that there is no work. My daughter came out and cleaned up a bunch last week. My wife had her knee replace and the daughter is helping take care of her during recovery.
 
Hello, may I ask what the specifics would be for a milling machine that would be capable of producing a swamped barrel up to 54" long? Also, what sort of lathe/boring set-up would you need to bore barrels up to that length? Thanks
 
I don't do any deep hole drilling, I buy blanks that are drilled. My rifling machine has about 54" of travel which will do a 48" barrel.
To octagon a barrel you need a mill with enough travel to do the length of barrel. It can be done in stages on a short machine and may work better for a swamped barrel as each stage can be set to a different angle. Problem may be that an indexing head may not work on a short table.
 
Fellows,

I have put together what I think a comprehensive list of the ML barrel makers currently making barrels. I would be happy to reproduce here if you all want.

Deutch, sure would be nice to add a fellow specializing in smoothbores and fowlers in particular. I would certainly be interested as I know many others will be also.

John, I had added you in the list, but I dodn't really know what your product line consisted of. Would you embelish on that?

Best Regards,
Albert “Matamoro” Rasch
The Rasch Outdoor Chroniclesâ„¢
 
Matamoro said:
Fellows,




John, I had added you in the list, but I dodn't really know what your product line consisted of. Would you embelish on that?

Best Regards,
Albert “Matamoro” Rasch
The Rasch Outdoor Chroniclesâ„¢

I make very few barrels from scratch. Most of my work goes into repairing old barrels, relines, rebores and replace, Mostly on cartridge gun. When I replace a barrel I use a blank from anyone of several barrel makers. I do make a few large bore muzzle loading barrels with Forsyth rifling for one customer who makes underhammers.
I am a full time gunsmith but I shy away from modern firearms.
My barrel making would be one at a time custom orders only, nothing under 35 caliber.
You might want to add Jim Carpenter, 208-245-3693. He bought out Jerry Cunningham (Orion rifle barrel)several years back
 
You would be surprised at how many people who know I tinker with guns ask me if I can rifle a bbl. Its gotten to where I just say "Sure, the first one will only cost u $500,000. When they ask what in the heck I'm talking about I tell them thats what it would cost me for a button rifling machine.The average joe has absolutly no idea what goes into this process.
 
I just bought a rifling machine & going to try to rifle a few barrels this winter. It is a sine bar type manual machine & has a rack & pinion for the twist. The index head is set to cut 5,6,7,8,or nine grooves & it came with 33 dif cutter heads. It will cut at least a 48" barrel. It is designated right now to do a 1-48, 1-54, 1-66, 1-72 twist. But can actually be put to the twist you want by simple calculation & measuring, drill a 3/16" hole & put a screw in the set arm.

I need it like I need another hole in my head, as I have more barrels now than I will ever get built. But figured when I retire it may be something nice to do for a change & also want to build me & my sons a rifle each that I personally rifled the barrel.

Keith Lisle
 

Latest posts

Back
Top