Hawken12 said:
Hello Stophel and thanks for yer input,Is your starter groove ,of the thickness of the minimum measurment of the barrel?and how do you increase to final ,bottom flats(chisel?)as both ends increase,no?
I can see removing extra material ,fairly quickly as the way to go,probly gonna use a saw an chisel,there ,the side depths bother me as the barrel is let in the sides at the back and front or the minimum increase,do I just use lampblack on the bottoms to get this?
I do understand the importance of multiple measurments.Thankyou
I guess the plane I made has a cutting tooth about a quarter inch wide and it goes about 3/8" deep. This is a tad smaller and shallower than the smallest dimension would be on any barrel that I would ever use.
Once the starter groove is cut, then I mark my depth dimensions, and cut to those depths with a chisel. Then, I lay the barrel on the stock, and with a knife, score the edges VERY carefully. VERY CAREFULLY. Quite easy to screw up here. Better to have the lines in too far than out too far. Then I chisel down to make the side flats. The depth is strictly by eye. After that, I chisel the oblique flats, and widen the bottom flat as necessary, accounting for the taper and flare, again, entirely by eye. It's not until I have a nearly completed barrel inlet that I even put the barrel in and check for fit.
I use a pigment with paint thinner for marking. Burnt umber, sienna, whatever is handy (I have a fair supply of powdered paint pigments of various types). No black messy crap. The paint thinner evaporates, simply leaving the pigment dust...which is basically rust (earth pigments are primarily iron oxide). Wipes easily off the barrel, washes easily off your hands, and if desired, it can be easily scraped off the wood in the inlet. It doesn't soak into the wood.
One note: DON'T BELIEVE THE MARKS ON THE SIDES OF THE BARREL CHANNEL! It will mark there no matter what, and if you keep cutting wood off the sides, you'll end up with a big gap. If the barrel is tight, make sure you exhaust all other possible areas before even thinking about looking at the sides. Now, the inlet on the sides, contrary to popular belief, does not have to be perfect, as even I, who can see discrepancies of a thousandths of an inch, don't notice small gaps, but big ones are ugly.
On a good day, I can inlet a rifle barrel in sugar maple within about 4 1/2 hours. Done, set, and with decent contact the whole length. Sometimes, though, I can spend a ridiculous number of hours getting things just right. One thing that really torques me is when the stock blank flexes. Changing humidity, I guess. I want the barrel to simply sit in the channel, without having to squeeze the stock up anywhere. Not important, I know, but it drives me nuts. Sometimes I get everything done, and the next day, I pick it up and squeeze it together at the middle, and there's a bit of flex. AAAGH!
But that's just me.