Just like in the Police Academy. "Lieutenant Thaddeus Harris: Son, where did you get that gun? Cadet Eugene Tackleberry: [smiling] My mum gave it to me."
We tried one piece flow at my aerospace workplace but it wouldn't work. Some of the lean principles worked but not as a whole. Too many part numbers to work. Corporate tried to shove that crap down our throats and we proved to them it wouldn't work. It took a couple million dollars of lost revenue for them to figure out it wouldn't work but then they always have all the answeres. Maybe it does in your shop. It is a good principle IF you can make it work. We used Edmonds air gauge equipment also. Very good tooling. I worked 36 years as a machinist and engineering tech. I must say you folks have your processes down to a science and have good inspection and tooling. Best thing I saw was in process inspection by the operators. We had a certified operator program where when you got qualified your pay scale was better. You folks got it going on. Great set up with good machines and a very clean well organized shop.
Ella you are the Best always, no matter what you do is super professional!!! You put your heart and soul into every job. We definitely miss you in Chicago❤🙏
This is only one way. Look up cold forge rifling. Literally a giant machine that hammers around the barrel with the rifle pattern being imprinted inside. Worked at a factory that did it that way. Hated the place but the process itself was pretty cool.
Hi thank you so much for this excellent video I have a weird question Is it possible to test two rifles with an identical barrel and everything else different? Same ammo of course If their accuracy will be the same this to me will mean that the barrel is what makes or breaks accuracy That is what i believe I wonder if you perform shooting accuracy tests and how
@@Hetzer63 indeed. That’s the key to any successful business… dedicated, trained and multi faceted staff. It’s obvious she knows her jobs and even corrects the gentleman on the some manufacturing steps.
How is headspace checked without a barrel extension installed? Chamber depth can be checked in process, but how is headspace checked? It's a three way relationship of stacked tolerances to get ar15 headspace right so where are the other two parts? 5:18
You can't. They likely call the in-process check "headspace" because it's a singular manufacturing operation, not an assembly facility. It's just an informal operation name, not the technically correct verbage. Happens all the time in manufacturing.
It seems like she knows what she is doing and he does not. But then, he is probably a manager. You would think that he had prepared for this video better.
Speaking from inches (1 tousandth ich= 25 tousandth of a millimeter...) , this is not a impressive precision...i make piston pins with 3 tousand millimeter tolerance...
why is he using a Micromiter to measure a round object and not a Caliper, I was told micromiters are for thickness on flat surfaces and Calipers will give you a true diamiter that you ain't gonna get trying to use a micromiter because you're not a machine and you're not going to hit the center by eyeballing it.
Micrometers have flat anvils like calipers have flat jaws. Calipers are quick sticks, and you could have wear you don't see, flex or slop in the sliding pieces, etc. Saying you can't measure diameter with a micrometer is laughably ignorant.
@@devincook2736 think i'm just used to seeing micromiters with pivoting heads that are specific for flat stock and foget there are different stable kinds for measuring wires. still for a round object I'd use a Caliper, that's what they are made for.
@@peeeoii2738 calipers have flat jaws that touch from one side to the oposing side of the round object giving you the diamiter, ID or OD. if you use a micromiter to measure the opening of a nearly 6-7" pipe, you might as well be using a stretchy string and just guessing where it gets the widest.
@@lordreginaldfilibuster mics read the the 1st-6th decimal place more accurately than calipers also the clutches/slips on mics are a lot more reliable than using the thumb wheel on calipers due to the slips/clutches preventing the user from over clamping the particular object you are measuring, calipers are NOT as accurate measuring the OD than mics are (even on round, cylindrical objects lol) especially if there is a micrometer stand involved Sure calipers are better than Standard mics for ID (you can’t measure ID with standard mics haha) but they air gauged the ID and there’s other gauges that give a more accurate reading for ID than calipers, calipers are are the fast and down and dirty way to measure most things and it will give you a good idea of most things but they are the jack of all trades master of none if you will this is learned in virtually every machinist school on week one, the anvil and swivel on standard mics are flat too where are you getting your information from?
That's my mom checking all this 😊... I'm very proud of her !!!
Obviously, Mom knows more than the dude in the Narration. I am proud of her also.
Just like in the Police Academy.
"Lieutenant Thaddeus Harris:
Son, where did you get that gun?
Cadet Eugene Tackleberry:
[smiling]
My mum gave it to me."
@@JRCinKYI was thinking the same thing😄 she should have giving us the tour👍
Thats cool , a mom to be proud of ! I just ordered a 20" barrel , please tell mom to give special attention to all 20" barrels.
What machine tools do they use?
I'm finding it hard to imagine the algorithmic mathematics and the extreme engineering that goes into making these things ...amazing!
We tried one piece flow at my aerospace workplace but it wouldn't work. Some of the lean principles worked but not as a whole. Too many part numbers to work. Corporate tried to shove that crap down our throats and we proved to them it wouldn't work. It took a couple million dollars of lost revenue for them to figure out it wouldn't work but then they always have all the answeres. Maybe it does in your shop. It is a good principle IF you can make it work. We used Edmonds air gauge equipment also. Very good tooling. I worked 36 years as a machinist and engineering tech. I must say you folks have your processes down to a science and have good inspection and tooling. Best thing I saw was in process inspection by the operators. We had a certified operator program where when you got qualified your pay scale was better. You folks got it going on. Great set up with good machines and a very clean well organized shop.
I did some work for this company recently, but I had never heard of them before. It's pretty cool this came up in my suggestions.
Ella is the best , she puts her heart into everything she does.❤
I just ordered a 7.5” 300blk barrel from these ppl and I like that they have a good way of making these barrels!!
No wonder it takes so long. They make Ella do all the work and he stands around and talks! 😂
Ella you are the Best always, no matter what you do is super professional!!! You put your heart and soul into every job.
We definitely miss you in Chicago❤🙏
Got a hell of an operation there I like all your quality control I would definitely buy your product if I needed them or when I do thank you
Good stuff right there. I really appreciate the geeky info on metals and processing to learn more about how things work. Awesome job TK!
You gotta love the surface plate and all the measuring instruments that go with it...
Amazing skilled people who are experts at their craft !👍
Thank you for a very interesting tour.
I think Ella needs a raise.
I'd always wondered how rifling a barrel was performed, and now I wonder how they did it a century ago, before CNC mills existed.
Forced a rod with two-three hard and slanted protusions down the bore. Rifling need not be very deep.
Button rifling, and it is still done.
This is only one way. Look up cold forge rifling. Literally a giant machine that hammers around the barrel with the rifle pattern being imprinted inside. Worked at a factory that did it that way. Hated the place but the process itself was pretty cool.
Picked up TK 7.62x39 for 99$. Money well spent.
Glad you're enjoying it! We appreciate you ordering it!
Those drill bits gotta be pricey to drill that much metal and not get dull quickly.
Carbide and coolant
Pick em up at Harbor Freight
Damn. That’s a high tech facility
Thanks - learned something new today with looking up Air Guaging
Great to hear! The internet is a fun place!
People working at fast food like “we deserve $30 an hour”
They do, work is work. Plus I’m sorry but fast food is much harder than this, you clearly haven’t worked very much.
They don't really show how it works. Just standing there looking at a machine. No inside look at the process.
Hi thank you so much for this excellent video
I have a weird question
Is it possible to test two rifles with an identical barrel and everything else different?
Same ammo of course
If their accuracy will be the same this to me will mean that the barrel is what makes or breaks accuracy
That is what i believe
I wonder if you perform shooting accuracy tests and how
Great video, but the music bed sounds like a 1990s training film
I bought one of your barrels 1/2 MOA at 100 yds
Im debating on getting one of your 22 inch 6.5 grendel barrels or the same thing from grendel hunter i decently like your price better.
Very nice baril💖
Just got me a couple of Glock 19 barrels love em.
Not gonna lie... I thought it was pronounced "SEE-ver-ville, Tennessee" until you said it properly in this video lol 😅
How very old school....
Should have had the camera man zoom in on the indicator when the operator was checking for concentricity to show the actual runout.
Thanks for the video.
I would love for you to make me a 24” or 26” ar-10 308. Can’t find one.
How big is the barrel in millimeters?
Can you tell me when the 14.5 223 wylde barrels will be available again? Thanks!
Next week on Wednesday!
The ONLY 12.5" 300 Blackout upper I could get for less than $600 was from Pro2A Tactical with a Tactical Kinetics barrel. Very grateful!
What materials you use for berral
how much does one barrel unit cost
You can tell when an office person does a walk through. They barely know what's going on.
Nice Ella god job😮
How much 24ench estil barel
How to dilewery rifel barel
Do you make air rifle barrel Seneca Sumatra Carbine Barrel, .25 caliber thanks
How to buy this barrel ? I need 1 for experiment
I have bought and worn out 23 barrels in 5.56 but I can't figure out why anyone would buy a barrel less than 20 inches.
Excellent
Do you do 22lr barrel?
like .22 riffle barrel, how matt?
What steel foundry do you use
What barrel profile do you sell.
Still dont show you how they drill/rifle the barrel proper???🙄🙄
can you do ar100 barrel 450 bushmaster
Ella is so underpaid and you know it! 4 engineering patriotic jobs!
Give her a raise! 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Do you do 22lr barrel?. Đặt về VN đc ko.
Not enough light to see video well.
The lady Ella has like 4 jobs 😂
@@Hetzer63 indeed. That’s the key to any successful business… dedicated, trained and multi faceted staff. It’s obvious she knows her jobs and even corrects the gentleman on the some manufacturing steps.
She’s one of our QC techs. She’s solid.
@@dbyers1225 she’s doing an excellent job.
@@aviator267 Indeed she is.
That's my mom lol .. seriously
How is headspace checked without a barrel extension installed? Chamber depth can be checked in process, but how is headspace checked? It's a three way relationship of stacked tolerances to get ar15 headspace right so where are the other two parts? 5:18
You can't. They likely call the in-process check "headspace" because it's a singular manufacturing operation, not an assembly facility. It's just an informal operation name, not the technically correct verbage. Happens all the time in manufacturing.
Great
Careful, the ATF will be making a rule against showing this so watch soon.
It seems like she knows what she is doing and he does not. But then, he is probably a manager. You would think that he had prepared for this video better.
Pure Witch craft i say.
👍🏻
Interesting But get rid of the irritating music.
Still working in Inch? 😂
Speaking from inches (1 tousandth ich= 25 tousandth of a millimeter...) , this is not a impressive precision...i make piston pins with 3 tousand millimeter tolerance...
AR10
To bad they don’t actually show you what the HELL is being done! Not much a video but as a joke maybe?
🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🖐️🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲
why is he using a Micromiter to measure a round object and not a Caliper, I was told micromiters are for thickness on flat surfaces and Calipers will give you a true diamiter that you ain't gonna get trying to use a micromiter because you're not a machine and you're not going to hit the center by eyeballing it.
Micrometers have flat anvils like calipers have flat jaws. Calipers are quick sticks, and you could have wear you don't see, flex or slop in the sliding pieces, etc. Saying you can't measure diameter with a micrometer is laughably ignorant.
@@devincook2736 think i'm just used to seeing micromiters with pivoting heads that are specific for flat stock and foget there are different stable kinds for measuring wires. still for a round object I'd use a Caliper, that's what they are made for.
Because Calipers are the least accurate and as already stated micrometers have a flat service on the anvil.
@@peeeoii2738 calipers have flat jaws that touch from one side to the oposing side of the round object giving you the diamiter, ID or OD. if you use a micromiter to measure the opening of a nearly 6-7" pipe, you might as well be using a stretchy string and just guessing where it gets the widest.
@@lordreginaldfilibuster mics read the the 1st-6th decimal place more accurately than calipers also the clutches/slips on mics are a lot more reliable than using the thumb wheel on calipers due to the slips/clutches preventing the user from over clamping the particular object you are measuring, calipers are NOT as accurate measuring the OD than mics are (even on round, cylindrical objects lol) especially if there is a micrometer stand involved Sure calipers are better than Standard mics for ID (you can’t measure ID with standard mics haha) but they air gauged the ID and there’s other gauges that give a more accurate reading for ID than calipers, calipers are are the fast and down and dirty way to measure most things and it will give you a good idea of most things but they are the jack of all trades master of none if you will this is learned in virtually every machinist school on week one, the anvil and swivel on standard mics are flat too where are you getting your information from?
Repeal the second amendment. If anyone really wants a gun, make them earn the privilege. Like how we do with driver's licenses.
what material or wht iron do they used for the barrel??..
How much for a 556 barrel unfinished, just rifled