1isenough wrote on Jan 17
th, 2020 at 7:53pm:
JLouis,
Thanks JLouis. Yes, I would use a cartridge to headspace. I am a bit of a novice. I have always hand-reamed the finish chamber cut to get a tight headspace. I first check the short-chambered barrel for fit, to get an idea of how much material I am going to have to cut. Then I put the barrel in a padded vice and give the reamer a few turns, then mount the barrel and check the progress. For example, on a Martini Cadet I do this until the block rubs on the cartridge and barely will close. A couple of more turns with the reamer and it closes without rubbing, and I am there. I figured cutting the rim would require mounting the barrel in a lathe, centered and set to zero runout, and begin cutting. The process of dis-mounting and re-calibrating the check the progress would seem make the rim-cutting process more time-consuming. Is there a better way?
From what I have read.
It is best to cut your threads and shoulder so it is one thou off the squared breach block.
Cig paper.
Chambered to fit that rim clearance as well.
All in one go.
You can just screw on the block can’t you without moving the blank?
It keeps tension off the pivots and block and undue stresses you don’t need on the cadet action.
Since you have no real leverage in seating or extracting a case.
Seating into the lands will help centre the case for fire forming.
The Case expands to what is what ,where it is of what you got.
From then on it’s just partial neck sizing and leaving things alone if you have too.
Unless you overly stretch the brass.
But then again I’ve only read about it.
And it sounded like good logic to me.
But I ain’t no gun plumber but I did cut a shit load of threads in a past life.