I guess there is some truth to the statement that ignorance is bliss. Not being a professional maker, I took a shelf bracket made of metal and ground down the little bulge inside the crotch of it. I used one of the big thick bad boys that are about four or five inches long on each side.
I shoved a patched ball down about a half inch further than my cut line.
Now I'm working up a sweat and shaking like a leaf, so I whipped out the rosary, stopped and did some coffee and beads.
I clamped the thing in my Rice Barrels breech wrench blocks in my vice, levelled the barrel in said arrangement, applied the squared shelf bracket with a common C clamp at the mark I wanted to cut on. I checked to make sure the elbow of the shelf bracket was squarely on the top flat as the barrel lay in the vice, and hack sawed it with a new, fresh blade and a lot of oil.
That didn't seem so bad, so I opened my eyes. Kinda like I used to do when I was a kid at second base finding a short hop in the glove...
Then I took a round stone ( because I am too incompetent to hold a coned stone straight) and crowned the muzzle, eyeball even. Then I chickened out on the eyeball part and engaged my T square.
Shoved the ball out the muzzle taking the bits of metal with it, swabbed the barrel and fitted it to my rifle. Vwa Lah
Once breeched and pinned and bolted in, I went down to the range trying to think of what to write here in this forum under the thread title of... "OMG, another moron mistake please help"...
I got Ol' Billy Bones on the bench, and shot a one inch group on the red dot at 25 yards and a three inch group on the red dot at 50 yards.
Either I found a simple tool that works, or I backed into it by accident, or St. Joseph The Worker intervened out of pity, but I will do this again with the exception of using the shelf bracket only once each time.
OK...so, now...all you pro's... take your best shot.
Good Night for now and may God Bless...
The Capgun Kid