Re: Pillar Material...6061 or 7075?
<span style="font-style: italic">"and then tell me the heat expansion of aluminum pillars vs. steel pillars doesn't matter?" </span>
Oky doky. Short answer: NO, it does not matter.
Long winded dissertation to follow:
From the 27th edition of the Machinery's Handbook. Pretty much the most informative and painful little book to sift through when in search of absolutes pertaining to all things cool and manly.
Coefficients of Thermal Expansion (Begins on page 402)
-Table #8. Typical values of coefficient and linear thermal expansion for thermoplastics and other commonly used materials
Values are in in/in/Deg F x 10-5
Steel: .6
Aluminum: 1.2
-Table #13. typical thermal properties of various metals
Values are in uin/in-F*
6061 aluminum 13.0
7075 aluminum 13.1
303 stainless steel 9.6
To save everyone (including myself) the brain damage from having to read through a pile of engineering arithmetic click on this link and plug in the coefficient values. Be sure all your units are consistent. Metric/Celsius, Imperial/Fahrenheit.
Thermal Expansion Calculator
Now ask yourself that since you do have to worry about grains of powder, bullet concentricity, machine work, the associated metroloy, surface finish, and the marksmanship fundamentals (you forgot that one), is this REALLY something you want to stress over? Were talking 6 points to the right of the decimal point gents.
Never mind that if you think your RCBS/Lyman/Dillan manual/electronic scale is a qualified laboratory grade instrument you are only fooling yourself.
$200 bucks for a digital scale at Cabellas or a $2500 laboratory grade balance from Denver Instrument?
At some point a person should realize that your going to be far, far, far ahead in this game if you stop obsessing over things that you can't control and start focusing on things you can. Build a gun using good parts by someone who understands accurate gunmaking. Select/assemble the appropriate ammunition, and then shoot, shoot, shoot, and shoot some more.
I've been friends with Mid Tompkins, his wife Nancy, and both Sheri/Michelle since I was 19 years old. Lonnes Wigger and I used to shoot smallbore prone together once a week. Kyle Leibertrau is my young prodigy that I sponsor in Palma. David Karcher, the 2002 National SR Champion is my best friend.
These are all world class competitive marksmen with Olympic, World, National, and International marquee event wins on their resumes. They've forgotten more about tearing the X ring a new one than 99.999% of the shooting community will ever know. If you've ever seen a rifle built by Mid Tompkins you'll walk away scratching your head as to how the thing even hits the backstop (bless his heart) yet ALL of Mid's guns will deliver X counts well over 60% when in <span style="font-style: italic">capable</span> hands. I can promise you that if you begin pegging them with questions about thermal coefficients they are going to look at you like your from another planet. David might not since he's an engineer.
Save $17.39 on a K/N air filter.