Is there anyone out there doing barrel chambering on a 5-axis VMC?
With the B axis turned 90 degree, and barrel mounted vertically, and the bore roughly colinear to the spindle, a touch probe should be able to go down the bore, probe multiple point to calculate how much B/C axis need to turn for perfect alignment, then rough out the chamber with drill or end mill, chamber with reamer, and thread mill the external thread.
With CNC lathe, all the cutting is automated but there's still a significant amount of human labor to dial in the bore. This sounds like one way to fully automate the process.
So curious if is this approach is used? And if not, why (accuracy of the 5-axis trunnion)?
The only reference I can find is @LRI using a similar approach for muzzle thread and receiver blueprint, but I think their chamber work is still done on a lathe?
With the B axis turned 90 degree, and barrel mounted vertically, and the bore roughly colinear to the spindle, a touch probe should be able to go down the bore, probe multiple point to calculate how much B/C axis need to turn for perfect alignment, then rough out the chamber with drill or end mill, chamber with reamer, and thread mill the external thread.
With CNC lathe, all the cutting is automated but there's still a significant amount of human labor to dial in the bore. This sounds like one way to fully automate the process.
So curious if is this approach is used? And if not, why (accuracy of the 5-axis trunnion)?
The only reference I can find is @LRI using a similar approach for muzzle thread and receiver blueprint, but I think their chamber work is still done on a lathe?