.... You're not going to gain a lot of thickness by moving 1/8" off to one side.
Dimpling the bore is the biggest concern with staples. Second is drilling into the bore.
...
I'm not concerned, I'm discussing technique.
Yeah, it's thicker 1/8" over for sure. It gets thicker all the way to the corner.
HAY, somebuddy with CAD program draw it up for us. I don't has that right now. But we only need 2 concentric circles inside an octagon. The inner circle is the bore and the outer circle would be the groove depth (could get by with just this one). The octagon is your bbl outside dimension, AT the point of attachment. I'm interested to see what difference .125" from center of land/bore would make. Maybe it should be 3/16"?
Is there an APP for that?
Of course this assumes bore/bbl concentricity, margin of error should consider that.
Specifically the waist on a A-wt Colerain PA44 is listed as .668 and I'm working with a .40 which has round-bottom rifling at .012". Of course we don't fool with the six inches of .668, but how far do we need to go into the flare to get certified "ok" wall thickness? Do we go to .690 or .700 or more?
That depends, a dovetail is cut all the way across, thereby removing metal at the thinnest point of the cross-section. A staple needs two holes. Those holes do not have to be in the thinnest part. A scalable drawing would be handy dandy-even for dovetails.
Yes, I'm being redundant, but just trying to catch the interest of a CAD person, so i don't spend all day looking up the software to do it.
Here's a non-scaled section (quartz!). With a CAD drawing/app properly scaled we might know just how far laterally to move the holes for a significant difference.
But i've wasted enough time trying to dig up appropriate drawings.The "thickness" diff between 12 and 3 minutes after looks significant to me.
along those lines: I did do some comparisons in published specs (not actual measurements) between my 40/A and 45/B to find that there's no appreciable difference in wall thickness. The larger bore and the deeper rifling cancel out the heavier contour. I'm going to weigh them to verify.
But then also, this is gun making not rocketships and traditional methods and considerations tend to work out just fine. Methinks that staples give more chances for error, probably should be reserved for the less ham-fisted smittys.