One of my good friends recently came across a good find, (free of course) . One of the local milk dairy's that produced their own plastic milk jugs dipsosed of some of the machinery that was used for this purpose. He found (2) 7-1/4" Od x 3" ID about 7'- 6'' long sections of steel pipe that were used to make milk jugs.The bad news is that they have a series of holes about 1/4 dia. drilled in a radial pattern (6). around the circumference all the way thru the outter wall , at 18 inch intervals the whole length of the tube. Then it gets worse, also the tubes each have an internal steel auger frozen in place with solidified plastic hardened the entire length of the piece.
Some of the suggestions I've heard so far include building a long trench fire below the tube to slowly melt and soften the old plastic ( we have been told that this type of plastisc melts at a low 180 degrees F) At the same time, rig a come-along to the exposed end of the auger to extract this piece. If that works how would this affect the strength to the tube? It would only be used for reanactments with powder only no live fire. And how would you plug or fill the many holes? I thought about driling and tapping for high strength, hard, fine thread bolts welded on the exterior ? then clean up the interior with an internal boring bar. He has a next door neighbor with an industrial machine shop with a lathe large enough th chuck up one of these pieces. My friend wants to build a Blakely style gun with another piece of pipe welded over the breach as a reinforce. The breach plug would be pressed in and welded as per the proper thickness formula . Same with the trunons. This is about a thousand dollar piece of pip if you had to buy it new, sow it might be worth a try ? or ir it only good for a fence post? Any ideas?. Also if this works a might get a shot at having enough left over for my 2.9 inch confederate rifle.
Thanks: civilcannon