MIM Barrels

DonD

Member
Joined
Feb 1, 2003
Messages
2,103
Reaction score
935
Location
Central TX
Well, it was a surprise to me but S&W has been making MIM barrels since the late 90s, this coming from an S&W engineer I've had the pleasure of communicating with for a number of years.

Don't know for sure but I suspect that the barrels are the snubbies, he did say that .500 Mags do not have MIM barrels. That's all the information I have. Don
 
Register to hide this ad
I can see where the J-frame barrels, with their integral serrated front ramp, would be ideal for the MIM process. Crank'em out like Oscar Mayer hot dogs. (Which, BTW, is not meant to be an insult).
 
There is a picture of one at 2:12.

[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wXSi6GHa694&feature=youtu.be[/ame]
 
Mim barrel casted? Injected molded.

Do they install a sleeve for the barrel then Mim around it.
Or is the Mim the complete barrel?

I'm not afraid of Mim parts as long as a good quality steel is used.

My auto ordnance 1911 US ARMY has a investment casted frame made from 4140 steel which is good stuff.

Steel castings has been done for a century. Mim is on a smaller accurate scale.
 
Last edited:
From Wikipedia...

Metal injection molding (MIM) is a metalworking process by which finely-powdered metal is mixed with a measured amount of binder material to comprise a "feedstock" capable of being handled by plastic processing equipment through a process known as injection mold forming. The molding process allows complex parts to be shaped in a single operation and in high volume. End products are commonly component items used in various industries and applications. The nature of MIM feedstock flow is defined by a physics called rheology.[1] Current equipment capability requires processing to stay limited to products that can be molded using typical volumes of 100 grams or less per "shot" into the mold. Rheology does allow this "shot" to be distributed into multiple cavities, thus becoming cost-effective for small, intricate, high-volume products which would otherwise be quite expensive to produce by alternate or classic methods. The variety of metals capable of implementation within MIM feedstock are referred to as powder metallurgy, and these contain the same alloying constituents found in industry standards for common and exotic metal applications. Subsequent conditioning operations are performed on the molded shape, where the binder material is removed and the metal particles are coalesced into the desired state for the metal alloy.

Adios,

Pizza Bob
 
Barrels made out of MIM process? Is MIM that strong? Does not sound right to me but I could be wrong.
 
My wife and I recently visited the S&W factory (yes, the Angels sing when you enter the doors) and "many" of the barrels are MIM, but I don't know which models.

I saw MIM snubbie barrels being ECM rifled, SDVE barrels being machined from bar stock, and 22c barrels being traditionally broach rifled. I didn't get a chance to ask what families got which technologies.
 
J frame barrels are one piece, not a shroud and insert design.

I don't think this is universally true.
Don't the 340 series have two piece barrels.
Two piece designs have the advantage of not depending on barrel torque to get the front sight "vertical". The shroud, with the front sight blade, is indexed to the frame. This makes the sight alignment independent from barrel torque.

Best,
Rick
 
If no one is sure exactly which models have MIM barrels, are there any physical characteristics we can look for to identify them (like we can on MIM triggers and hammers on the gen3 semi-autos) ?
 
Rick, you are probably correct on the 340 series. I should have been more specific.

In general, I don't see what the issue is with MIM parts. Has anyone blown up a MIM barrel? Is there a problem with MIM triggers or hammers? The parts work and they keep the cost of new guns down because they don't require the machine work and hand fitting forged parts need. The old methods are not coming back and almost all the craftsmen that produced the old guns have long since retired. We can either buy old guns or accept the new methods. Personally, I do both.
 
Words in this video like ( disposable, cutting cost and cost savings ) are the key. Did I miss were he says higher-quality?? Don't know about you but I rather pay the extra for forged steel parts. But I guess this is the future and I guess we'll all have to just roll with it.
 
Back
Top