How do you cut a breech plug without messing up the threads? I was thinking of maybe spinning a die onto the threads first and then spinning it off after the cut. Will this work or is there a better way?
I am not a machinist by a long shot, but there is nothing wrong with your idea. For smaller threads, (a bolt) I just put a nut on and remove after the cut. A die and a file to cut the sharp edge is just fine IMO. If you have a tang on the plug already and are going to cut the face, I would be more concerned about making a perfect cut than messing up the threads.How do you cut a breech plug without messing up the threads? I was thinking of maybe spinning a die onto the threads first and then spinning it off after the cut. Will this work or is there a better way?
3/16" will be tough to cut with a hacksaw. If you do not have access to a lathe or mill, then you can grind and file, using permatex blue fitting paste. That is what I do, but then I am not a master machinist, nore have a lathe. For a non skilled person (don't have a clue your skill level) it is almost impossible to obtain a tang/barrel fit combined with the breech plug face bottoming out (and fitting) the counterbore step where the bore and rifling start.The tang and thread are all one. The plug threads are a little too long and doesn't allow the plug to seat against the barrel. There is about a 3/16" gap.
That should work -- . To my way of thinking a "jam nut" would mean two nuts jammed together but I could see where it could be taken as one nut run down to a shoulder as in this caseZugg,
you only use ONE jam nut. The slice through the flat ( as I described ) and clamping in the vise is what holds/Locks things in place for cutting and filing.
I consider the jam nut as somewhat sacrificial.. in that I'm not that worried if it gets a lil scratched and such as you are using it.
when you turn the nut back off, it clears the burs on the thread ends. a lil touch up filing and you are done?? Hopefully
Respect Always
Metalshaper/Jonathan
Your approach sounds like a workable one to me! Since it is such a short cut, I would grind it all and forget the die. Before you start, if you haven't already, make sure the counter bore shoulder is at 90 deg to the bore. It should be, but make sure it is. If it isn't that of course will really affect the fitting/fit. Dial calipers can do that for you. You did not say, but I assume this is on a round barrel??? If it is octagon, then you are also going to have to consider timing for the tang to coincide with a flat.Flintlockar, I have a fully equipped shop for building knives, hatchets, etc.. However I do not have a metal lathe or mill. I was thinking that I could cut plug about a 1/32" long and then grind off as needed to get right seat and alignment. I would use 5/8"x18 die as guide and then spin off after cut. Would it work though is the big question?
Larry, The counter bore shoulder is 90 deg. and yes it is octagon. Will take it slow and easy.
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