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I am going to get a double shotgun and attempt to regulate the barrels for slugs. I have the support of my friend who is a gun smith, and another friend who owns a huge machine shop. I think in the end it will just come down to lots and lots of frustrating work, and rework. It's been a while since I welded or soldiered. Sand Creek November 29 1864 | ||
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One of Us |
See if you can find a copy of "Gunsmithing", by Roy F. Dunlap. There's a lot shotgun info in it, including his method of soldering barrels. | |||
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One of Us |
I'd try a few different loads before firing up the torch. But...if you really want to indulge in self punishment, I'd get the tape from ACGG "Gunsmithing techiques of Bill Nittler" He gives detailed drawings on his fixture for clamping ribs and barrels. You may not have to get quite as fancy, but the idea is sound. I made my own, only welded the parts from bar stock rather than have them cast. I've seen suggestions of wiring the parts together..believe me...make the fixtures! You can "tweak" to your heart's content prior to final joining...good luck! | |||
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One of Us |
I'm definitely going to try to tune with loads before I start taking stuff apart.
Sand Creek November 29 1864 | |||
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One of Us |
im not a machinist, or a gunsmith either.... but ive played with regulating my remington spr22... why not do something simple like they did???... use a barrel band to hold the barrels together at the muzzle, where 1 barrel is fixed, and 1 barrel slips.... then put a jackscrew system in the middle somewhere.... the #2 idea is to put a moveable regulaton wedge between the muzzles, like my chapuis DR....wedge it in and out... helluva lot simpler then soldering barrels back and forth... you can always make a filler strip to cover up the space between the barrels... don't re-invent the wheel....my $0.02 worth... go big or go home ........ DSC-- Life Member NRA--Life member DRSS--9.3x74 r Chapuis | |||
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One of Us |
I've been discussing this with my machine shop friend. It has a lot of advantages. But it also has a lot of work up front.
Sand Creek November 29 1864 | |||
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