Chuckster wrote on Aug 14
th, 2021 at 7:57am:
Greg, How do you use a 3-jaw chuck for threading a barrel? Mine are certainly not that accurate.
Chuck
Chuck,
First thing, not all barrels run concentric inside to outside. I had a couple of these to choose from and one did - within a couple.
{Next, I despise in-accurate machines and tooling, do what it takes to make them correct or else make sure you understand what their flaws are and work with them - a little soap box rant about to happen... I've had employees that didn't trust the dial on the machine so they use their travel indicator for their depth of cut but then you look at how they have their dial sitting... rarely square to the ways??? I ask them if they are taking into account for the hypotenuse? get a dumb look... my dials work or we repair them. Mills, lathes, jig bores, grinders, etc. } end of rant.
Now the three jaws, on this particular machine - I keep the scroll fairly clean and lubed with a good diemakers grease. If my runout gets much in excess of .001 at the diameter range I work in most, .5" to 1.5" I regrind the jaws. (diameters on either side may run out a little more than that so if it matters I have other machinery that accommodates these demands.) Generally only takes about a half or one to get them true again. I'm anal about who runs this machine, it looks like a junker but I've spent time making it work for me.
Bob,
The Rigby Flats I've done on my rifles always begin with lumps left on the barrel - then removing everything that doesn't look like a flat

. With care and time and a good rotary table or indexer, you can get these close but it's a lot of hand work. The radius on the end of the flat is all hand work as is matching the space in between the flats to match the rest of the barrel contour. A bright light and a dim room really pronounces this contour blend.
I picked up a Sheffield air gage some time ago - used it to see what the effects of making Rigby Flats has to the bore, it's measurable. About as much as cutting a dovetail and then installing a front sight... or torqueing up v-threads vs. square threads. They all have effect. Soldering on a rib or a sight has a very measurable effect and the larger the bore, the more effect.