OK so I got this lovely custom 629 I bought from a german tuning company called Wischo, well I bought it from one of their going out of business sales.
Anyway I've been shooting hundreds of purchased cast bullet rounds through it the last 6 months and leading has been an issue. 44spl loads, various magnum loads, various bullet weights, I even tried tumbling the bullets in lee liquid alox for extra lube. The barrel I had slugged earlier and measured by a smith with a V-anvil micrometer (due to the 5-groove thing) and he said it was .4287", almost .429" then.
Now I slugged the cylinder throats last night and with my digital caliper I get .428" or .4285" sometimes. Now this is a caliper and not as precise but it does seem that the throats are likely to be on the small side, this could explain my leading issues I think. I need to acquire a micrometer to verify this.
If it turns out they are too small I suppose the solution is to ream the cylinders. I was thinking of reaming them to .430 or maybe .4295" if thats possible. I will be calibrating my own cast bullets to .430", I tried forcing a .430" bullet through the cylinders but it was not possible at all with any amount of hand force. So clearly they are a good bit under .430"
Now that I have explained the background to my problems my questions are the following:
1) To what size should I ream for best function, knowing the size of my barrel (.4287") and the size of the bullets (.430") I will use?
2) Who makes a good reamer, can I get it in the proper size or are they limited in selections?
3) Does anything else need to be done after reaming, IIRC some say that some polishing is needed to get rid of toolmarks? If so how do I go about this?
Thanks for any help.
Anyway I've been shooting hundreds of purchased cast bullet rounds through it the last 6 months and leading has been an issue. 44spl loads, various magnum loads, various bullet weights, I even tried tumbling the bullets in lee liquid alox for extra lube. The barrel I had slugged earlier and measured by a smith with a V-anvil micrometer (due to the 5-groove thing) and he said it was .4287", almost .429" then.
Now I slugged the cylinder throats last night and with my digital caliper I get .428" or .4285" sometimes. Now this is a caliper and not as precise but it does seem that the throats are likely to be on the small side, this could explain my leading issues I think. I need to acquire a micrometer to verify this.
If it turns out they are too small I suppose the solution is to ream the cylinders. I was thinking of reaming them to .430 or maybe .4295" if thats possible. I will be calibrating my own cast bullets to .430", I tried forcing a .430" bullet through the cylinders but it was not possible at all with any amount of hand force. So clearly they are a good bit under .430"
Now that I have explained the background to my problems my questions are the following:
1) To what size should I ream for best function, knowing the size of my barrel (.4287") and the size of the bullets (.430") I will use?
2) Who makes a good reamer, can I get it in the proper size or are they limited in selections?
3) Does anything else need to be done after reaming, IIRC some say that some polishing is needed to get rid of toolmarks? If so how do I go about this?
Thanks for any help.