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Cobalt/steel gun barrels

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https://forums.accuratereloading.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/9411043/m/7321059351

15 April 2011, 00:44
uwave
Cobalt/steel gun barrels
FYI guys

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2.../cobalt_gun_barrels/
15 April 2011, 17:54
D Humbarger
That is interesting.



Doug Humbarger
NRA Life member
Tonkin Gulf Yacht Club 72'73.
Yankee Station

Try to look unimportant. Your enemy might be low on ammo.
16 April 2011, 21:10
SemperFiHunter
Sure would have been nice to have been able to try one of these out back when I was a Grunt! I was an Anti-Tank Assault Man, but shot M60's almost as much as our 0331's. Shot the M240G's quite a bit also, later on. Oh, the good ole days...


REMANUS DURUS CORPS!
16 April 2011, 21:29
mete
The forming method is not new , it's how they make seamless tubing. It is however, a challenge with high temperature tough alloys ! I'd like to see the specs on the metal.
17 April 2011, 02:25
txhunter77
The process sounds a lot like hammer forging with the hammers being replaced with rollers.
18 April 2011, 05:32
farbedo
Nice idea, but cobalt is damn expensive. At 50%, that is one spendy barrel. Nice application of exotic materials.

As Mete noted, the process is the same/similar to a standard extrusion process for seamless tubing. I worked at Western Zirconium in Utah for a couple of years and we used a 4500 ton press to make zirconium tubing for nuclear fuel rods.

The press that we had was previously used to extrude tank barrels for Nazi Germany. It still had the Nazi markings in the cast housing.
18 April 2011, 08:23
kcstott
I think thats a very big typo. Cobalt would not lend itself very well to being 50% of the metals make up. I'd say more like 5%.
{Edit} No that correct 50% Cobalt alloy Holly crap!!

In cutting tools 5% cobalt changes the wear properties dramatically. We had a project a few years ago to make titanium part for a company and in production on the cnc lathe Nothing could beat a 5% cobalt screw machine length drill. It went four times longer then HSS before we had to change the tool. Carbide just would not hold up either.


www.KLStottlemyer.com

Deport the Homeless and Give the Illegals citizenship. AT LEAST THE ILLEGALS WILL WORK
20 April 2011, 01:41
Macifej
Yeah, this is super-secret stuff!! We did this about 5 years ago in our shed in SD. As the article says, cut rifling hard alloys isn't really doable. C350 can be cut first and then heat treated after since shrinkage isn't an issue with smaller sections.
20 April 2011, 03:50
Oddbod
So...

How does one avoid the almost inevitable "cook offs" if used in current design rifles?