The motivation for all this was to be able to swap cylinders, where each cylinder's length can vary slightly. So I decided to leave the frame/barrel as-is, since it already seems to have enough space to accommodate the longest cylinder I have, and make up any differences using shims that partner with each particular cylinder.
I added the solid spacer in the arbor hole, and this took a few passes until I got the right spacer. My goal was to prevent any barrel "tip-up" or "tip-down", but to keep it coaxial with the cylinder. Meanwhile, I made this aluminum dummy cylinder for fun and noted that the cylinder butted up perfectly flat against the cone when pushed forward ... perfect.
Well, not quite .....
View attachment 179664View attachment 179665
Note the witness marks on the front of the cylinder (from dry firing).
Ideally these should be perfectly round. The cone was ground true on a lathe, so this would seem to indicate a very slight left-right misalignment of the barrel WRT to cylinder.
Now, ... if I try measuring these "dents" I'm lucky to measure even one tenth. This is one of those things you can see in the right light, and almost feel with your fingers, but quite difficult to actually quantify.
So while this is sorta interesting I'm hard pressed to call it a problem that needs correction. Reckon I'll leave well enough alone and call it done .... before I REALLY screw something up