The Firing Line Forums

Go Back   The Firing Line Forums > The Skunkworks > The Smithy

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old April 2, 2009, 12:40 PM   #1
Tom2
Senior Member
 
Join Date: June 23, 2004
Location: Ohio
Posts: 5,676
Anyone have .32ACP reamer?

Any gunsmiths out there have a .32 ACP chamber reamer? I got a .32 barrel that is sticky for cartridges and the chamber needs cleaned up, apparently. Would send you barrel so you can clean it up. Anyone got one of these presumably rare tools? Will pay reasonable fees.
__________________
Your gun is like your nose, it is just wrong for someone else to pick it for you!
Tom2 is offline  
Old April 2, 2009, 01:27 PM   #2
Doyle
Senior Member
 
Join Date: June 20, 2007
Location: Rainbow City, Alabama
Posts: 7,167
Before I tried a reamer, I'd try some aluminum oxide sandpaper (maybe 400 grit followed by 600 grit) wrapped around a wood dowel. I'm guessing it can't need more than a tad bit of cleanup and the sandpaper should do the job.
Doyle is offline  
Old April 2, 2009, 05:09 PM   #3
Tom2
Senior Member
 
Join Date: June 23, 2004
Location: Ohio
Posts: 5,676
I tried a tapered cratex bit that just fit in the chamber and was just contacting the edge of the throat. Well did not help much. Funny thing, blaser rounds will usually not stick and extract OK but brass cased stuff hangs up even though the rear of the chamber is not a tight fit. I also buffed the inside of the chamber a little bit with cratex previously. I don't need the tool to change the headspace and that would be undesireable, just to clean up the throat.
__________________
Your gun is like your nose, it is just wrong for someone else to pick it for you!
Tom2 is offline  
Old April 2, 2009, 05:53 PM   #4
Unclenick
Staff
 
Join Date: March 4, 2005
Location: Ohio
Posts: 21,063
Before you do all that, do you see shiny rings on the brass after you extract it? This is not normally a round with enough pressure to stick brass to the chamber. Do you get an extractor mark on the case rims indicating sticky extraction? Do new cartridge cases drop in easily? If the chamber is big enough, you don't want it made bigger necessarily, though you could certainly polish it with a felt bob on a Dremel tool and some JB Bore compound without significantly changing its dimensions. Do the walls of the chamber look rougher than your other guns have? Depending on the action you are shooting it in, you might have a timing problem where the case tries to extract too soon? Since a lot of these little guys are straight blow-back actions, some examples of which depend more on their recoil spring's strength than others, a weakened recoil spring that has taken a set could be responsible for that.?

If you have ring marks and it seems certain the chamber surface is responsible, assuming the chamber hasn't been ringed by an overcharge, the rough surface was probably caused by chips in the original reamer that wasn't kept adequately cleaned and lubricated during chambering, the deep spots may therefore be too deep for a chamber reamer of correct dimensions to clean it off. It is worth noting, however, that this little chambering is almost straight, tapering just two thousands from stern to stem. It is also short enough that any tool maker with a good lathe and an inside toolpost grinder should be able to center the chamber in a 4-jaw chuck, set his toolpost to 0.22° (what the half angle of the SAAMI chamber drawing works out to) by indicator and just clean the peaks off the rough spots by running an abrasive point in and and out to resurface it. You'll want to avoid exceeding the maximum dimensions.

__________________
Gunsite Orange Hat Family Member
CMP Certified GSM Master Instructor
NRA Certified Rifle Instructor
NRA Benefactor Member and Golden Eagle
Unclenick is offline  
Old April 2, 2009, 10:50 PM   #5
Scorch
Senior Member
 
Join Date: February 13, 2006
Location: Washington state
Posts: 15,248
Yes, call John Taylor at Taylor Machine. He has a 32 ACP reamer. He is open M-F, 8:30-5ish 253-445-4073
__________________
Never try to educate someone who resists knowledge at all costs.
But what do I know?
Summit Arms Services
Scorch is offline  
Old April 3, 2009, 07:58 AM   #6
Tom2
Senior Member
 
Join Date: June 23, 2004
Location: Ohio
Posts: 5,676
OK on the shop with the tool. As for the other poster, the chamber is fine. The bullet is sticking to the lands or something when it is chambered. Therefore the problem is extracting a live round, as in clearing a loaded gun. The bullet sticks at the throat and the extractor pops over the little .32 rim thus not unloading the gun. I can drop a cartridge into the chamber with the barrel out of the gun. But if you put a little thumb pressure on the back of the cartridge it then hangs up and you have to pry it out. I would think a cartridge should just about fall back out of the chamber of the barrel out of the gun. Bullet ought not be contacting the lands like that enough to stick to them, when chambered? I know with rifles, that you make handloads with bullet seating, so the bullet does not quite contact the lands, otherwise, the bullet might stick and you would pull it out of the case when extracting the live round, in extreme cases.
__________________
Your gun is like your nose, it is just wrong for someone else to pick it for you!
Tom2 is offline  
Old April 3, 2009, 08:32 AM   #7
grymster2007
Senior Member
 
Join Date: May 22, 2007
Location: In the oak studded hills near Napa
Posts: 2,203
That's a funny drawing.

.0500 +.0450 +.0550 ??? Is that a typo?
__________________
grym
grymster2007 is offline  
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:18 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
This site and contents, including all posts, Copyright © 1998-2021 S.W.A.T. Magazine
Copyright Complaints: Please direct DMCA Takedown Notices to the registered agent: thefiringline.com
Page generated in 0.03997 seconds with 10 queries