02 September 2014, 10:06
npd345rebarreling a Ruger No 1
I have access to a couple of takeoff barrels from Ruger No 1's.
How difficult will it be to headspace a barrel from a different No 1 action, to another Ruger No 1 action,as well as get everything to lineup; rib, sights, extractor cut etc. ?
02 September 2014, 14:06
416RigbyHunterHave you done this type of thing before?
I have re-barreled a few rifles and you will need a go guage and a no/go gauge as well as a reamer if you need to adjust headspace correctly if it's quite a ways off. You may need to index the barrel one turn, trim it back and rechamber it to get the correct headspace.
It depends on how close it comes to indexing correctly, they won't always screw in with the sights on top.
Cheers.

02 September 2014, 17:13
Jim KobeNot only index for headspace, you will need to index to get the rib and extractor cut to line up. Not a job for the faint hearted, they don't normally index correctly.
02 September 2014, 19:29
npd345trust me this is nothing I would try to do myself!!
Jim who would you recommend or is this something you could take on?
02 September 2014, 23:03
dpcdYes, I have done several barrel swaps on #1s; they are not indexed in any way and it is random on how the new barrel will fit. They have to be faced off and indexed up, and the chamber deepened. I have never had one index perfectly as is but it is always possible if you are lucky. Good thing is that the extractors are very forgiving.
03 September 2014, 19:38
butchlocsend it to jim - and you might even want him to do a half octagon half round job

06 September 2014, 17:49
Lord FrithHi,
Years ago I traded into a Ruger #3 that had been re-chambered from a 45-70 to 460 Weatherby.
Tossed the #3 barrel and screwed a #1 45-70 in its place. Lo and behold, it indexed perfectly and headspaced correctly, also. An expected and repeatable occurrence? I don't think so. Just lucky.
Stephen