02-29-2016, 04:04 PM
A friend of mine at work makes duck and turkey calls in his spare time at home. One of the items that helps is a metal jig that is used to shape the barrel of a duck call accurately and quickly. I offered to make a prototype for him to try since the commercial ones available for sale are pretty expensive.
This is what I am trying to create.
I have some small blocks of 4140 pre hard so I started with the smallest one. This was a good chance to use my indexable end mill. It has two TPG222 inserts. I just wanted to get rid of the scale and rust on the outside of the block and get things squared up.
Here is a first pass using some dark cutting oil.
After I got the sides cleaned up I started on the ends. The ends were rough saw cut and were not very square. To get things aligned in the vise I gently clamped the 4140 block to a small angle block. I rested the bottom of the work piece on a single steel ball so it could tilt and pivot while everything was tightened up. As I gently tightened the vise I tapped the block with a nylon dead blow hammer. Then I tightened the C-clamp again. Then really snugged down the vise.
You can see the steel ball under the work piece.
And taking a pass on the end of the block. The end mill was making nice 6 and 9 shaped chips.
The finished product from yesterday. Not great but not bad. Next up will be to drill and bore the hole.
This is what I am trying to create.
I have some small blocks of 4140 pre hard so I started with the smallest one. This was a good chance to use my indexable end mill. It has two TPG222 inserts. I just wanted to get rid of the scale and rust on the outside of the block and get things squared up.
Here is a first pass using some dark cutting oil.
After I got the sides cleaned up I started on the ends. The ends were rough saw cut and were not very square. To get things aligned in the vise I gently clamped the 4140 block to a small angle block. I rested the bottom of the work piece on a single steel ball so it could tilt and pivot while everything was tightened up. As I gently tightened the vise I tapped the block with a nylon dead blow hammer. Then I tightened the C-clamp again. Then really snugged down the vise.
You can see the steel ball under the work piece.
And taking a pass on the end of the block. The end mill was making nice 6 and 9 shaped chips.
The finished product from yesterday. Not great but not bad. Next up will be to drill and bore the hole.
JScott, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Mar 2014.