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Installing touch hole liner

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Gtrubicon

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Hello, hopefully tomorrow I will be installing a White Lightning liner in a rifle I’ve been building. The liner will protrude in the barrel a bit. Is it better to pre trim the liner before installing or to remove breach plug and file it from the interior to flush. If I do the latter I’d assume I would remove trimmed liner, smooth filed edge and cone then reinstall. How should I go about this?
 
Hello, hopefully tomorrow I will be installing a White Lightning liner in a rifle I’ve been building. The liner will protrude in the barrel a bit. Is it better to pre trim the liner before installing or to remove breach plug and file it from the interior to flush. If I do the latter I’d assume I would remove trimmed liner, smooth filed edge and cone then reinstall. How should I go about this?
Way easier to it to the right length before final installation.
 
Hello, hopefully tomorrow I will be installing a White Lightning liner in a rifle I’ve been building. The liner will protrude in the barrel a bit. Is it better to pre trim the liner before installing or to remove breach plug and file it from the interior to flush. If I do the latter I’d assume I would remove trimmed liner, smooth filed edge and cone then reinstall. How should I go about this?
Trim before installation as @SDSmlf said. If you have a borescope you can see when it’s flush. If not, use you range rod, cleaning jag and patch to feel for anything sticking out in bore. And do a final check after the last tightening before you cut the tab off to make sure it’s flush. Don’t ask me how I know this.
 
Years ago...I installed a liner on a flintlock. I knew nothing about doing it correctly, but just that I needed to do it. I installed it and filed it flush from the outside. Looked good. Set up on the bench to try the rifle. Dad was to my right. I fired and looked at dad and he had a What? look on his face. I had filed it so thin that when the rifle went off it opened up to the diameter of the liner and shot a flame at him. I learn things by doing sometimes...
 
Years ago...I installed a liner on a flintlock. I knew nothing about doing it correctly, but just that I needed to do it. I installed it and filed it flush from the outside. Looked good. Set up on the bench to try the rifle. Dad was to my right. I fired and looked at dad and he had a What? look on his face. I had filed it so thin that when the rifle went off it opened up to the diameter of the liner and shot a flame at him. I learn things by doing sometimes...
That happens when the hole isn't countersunk for the liner's bevel. You end up with a knife edged hole that blows out or quickly burns out. Barrel wall permitting I measure the threaded hole and file off a thread or two to match the depth of the hole. After countersinking I should end up with a flash channel of about 1/32" or so.
I have a rifle that was self priming until I removed the liner and replaced it. The big name builder had not cut the threads far enough and filed into the tapered part of the liner. I cut the threads deeper and did it my way.
 
Good to go.
 

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Getting on with the sanding now.
 

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