is circumspective

| I'd say do the barrel extension simply for the ease of doing it on the OD (outside diameter). But, it might help to know which piece, if any, is out of tolerance.
"We're all travelers in this world. From the sweet grass to the packing house. Birth 'til death. We travel between the eternities." |
| Posts: 5673 | Location: Las Vegas, NV. | Registered: May 30, 2009 |  
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| I expect that your upper is Anodized, a chemical process that produces a thin and extremely hard layer of aluminum oxide. Opening up the ID on the upper will remove that protective layer. To me the obvious answer is to reduce the OD on the barrel extension. As someone with access to a Lathe it's also the far easier choice. One thing about your plans does concern me. That is the effect on accuracy. I have always believed that the ideal fit between upper and barrel is one that requires a bit of force to get everything "home". That way there aren't any vibrations going on between upper and barrel while a round is transiting the barrel. With no experience at all with the system that you are using I'm just speculating. Just bringing it up as a talking point. Love the idea of an easy barrel swap and don't know where the pitfalls of building one of these rifles would be.
I've stopped counting.
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| Posts: 5815 | Location: Michigan | Registered: November 07, 2008 |  
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Life's too short to live by the rules
| quote: Originally posted by cmparrish: So based on the feedback here and from additional research, it seems there was about of 50/50 split on what part I should take material from so I decided to do little from both parts. I lightly sanded the barrel extension and inside of the upper. I used 800 grit sandpaper and went very slow checking the fit frequently. With just a little bit of sanding on both parts I was able to remove just enough material to get a nice snug fit that easily slides in and out. The anodizing on the receiver is still intact. In fact you can’t even tell it was sanded. On the barrel extension it removed just a tiny bit of the finish. It should be good to go now. Thanks for all the help.
Chris
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| Posts: 1719 | Location: Richmond, VA | Registered: August 04, 2004 |  
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