Tn poor boy
40 Cal
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2020
- Messages
- 392
- Reaction score
- 327
Put a brass brush in hole back and forth works then sand your ram rod down
Thanks Dave I finished the rod that came with the rifle and two other rods I purchased from Kibler before. Sanded the other two down stained and tru oiled all three. And everything is fine until I install the ferrule against the stock or even just put the ferrule where it should go. Once in place the rod will not go into the ramrod tube in the stock beyond the ferrule. And this is the end of the rod with the narrowed end cap Kibler sent with the kit.Hi Onewas,
Others have given you good insight. Just remember when you finally fit the rod that humidity may swell it in place in the ramrod hole so don't make the fit too precise. Also stain and finish will swell the diameter a little too.
dave
Had to do the same thing on my last 2 builds. Take the barrel out. Lay something flat across the barrel channel, then clamp the thimble in place and see how much of the tab extends into the channel. Do this for all the thimbles. You are marking which thimble goes where and which end goes forward, aren't you?Maybe I missed this on this thread, but are you attempting the ramrod work with the barrel installed? If so, have you made sure the thimble tabs are not contacting the barrel? I had to trim mine considerably.
On my SMR the ramrod channel was drilled just about into the lock inlet (one of the early kits), when I did the final inletting for the mainspring I broke into the ramrod channel quite a bit. I opened up the hole in the lock inlet and made a scraper I could use from inside he lock inlet to turn the hole more toward the opposite side which corrected the problem. I didn't want to taper the 5/16" ramrod to make it fit because I feared going any smaller would make it too fragile so I chose to enlarge the hole instead.
I sanded the oversized ramrod some but not enough, in a brief senior moment I pushed it a little too hard into the hole opening trying to make it go in the forestock and cracked the wood at the entry pipe, superglue to the rescue.
A little more ramrod sanding at I had a perfect fit.
On my latest build had a bow in the ramrod groove that I didn't notice until after I inletted the pipes, this put the groove and the drilled hole on the forestock at a bad angle and the ramrod wasn't going in.
This time I peened a burr on the square end of a 5/16 ramrod drill and filed to be razer sharp and used this burr as a scraper to take out the bad angle in my ramrod hole. It took a surprisingly small amount of scraping to remove the obstruction for an easy ramrod fit.
I posted these pictures on another poor ramrod fit thread. I think you would need a 1/4" rod to make a scraper for a 5/16" hole in a SMR, seems like a 5/16" rod would get stuck. I am scraping out a 3/8" hole in the pictures.
My scraper;
View attachment 110046
Shimming the entry hole with leather to to put pressure on the scraper to make it hit the area that needed wood removal.
View attachment 110047
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