
Like my other one

And the treaded pipe I accidentally found on school

Thanks
Jack_Hogg wrote:Well, I am planning to build a 20mm short sniper.
Oh yea, I forgot to add "rifle"...Mr.Sandman wrote:Jack_Hogg wrote:Well, I am planning to build a 20mm short sniper.
Good gracious, you cant make a person from fittings
I if I could cut BSP threads on a lathe, I would probably do that. But on my school there is one very old lathe that I only use. I doubt that I can cut threads with that thing.POLAND_SPUD wrote:so couldn't you get a pipe and cut threads in it ??
Never said it was. Said I figured somebody took a piece of pipe and threaded it. But more significantly....Jack_Hogg wrote:I don't think someone has turned a solid piece of brass on a lathe and cut threads and drilled a hole through.
OK, so you're in the UK or some such. My point stands that I doubt it was a tapered thread (in the US, pipe threads are normally NPT - a tapered thread).The thread was a standard BSP gas thread. I did cut a straight piece off like 30mm long, and used it to connect my T's together (and endcap).
Why do you say that? Lathes *excel* at cutting threads. Use the lathe to cut the threads and you'll generally get a far superior product than if you use a traditional tap/dye setup to cut threads. Yes, it takes a bit more skill and yes, it takes longer.... But the results can be spectacular.But on my school there is one very old lathe that I only use. I doubt that I can cut threads with that thing.
Heck, I've got a question for ya.... WTF is a 'sniper'? I've never been able to figure out what people around here are talking about when they say they're buliding a 'sniper.' ...Looks like just another spud gun to me.spudamine wrote:I've always wondered, if sniper is inaccurate as it refers to the role, and sniper rifle is only correct if you have a rifled barrel, what the hell should we call, er 'snipers'?
LOL... But I believe they're just trying to say "A more precise/accurate spudgun than your typical s&p" but with fewer words... It's all relative...The term sniper was first attested in 1824 in the sense of the word "sharpshooter".[2] The verb "to snipe" originated in the 1770s among soldiers in British India where a hunter skilled enough to kill the elusive snipe was dubbed a "sniper".[2]