TubaTinker wrote:
Nope! I've already looked into the Jarno taper reamers. The taper is right, but they have the same problem as the Morse taper reamers... The size that would be effective to make the small to regular shank transition would be an 'in between' size. The reamer would need to have a body of 2.75" long and run from .600dia down to .463dia. The major effective diameter on a regular shank receive (from what I can see on my mouthpieces) is about .578dia.
I spoke to Cliff Ferree on Wednesday about this and he can custom-make whatever I want for what I think is a reasonable price (about $60). I email Gary Ferree last night with the above dimensions and asked for a firm price.
Dan, I've got to be missing something here, so please bear with me and try to explain things in words of few syllables.
First off, I'm assuming that because the tapered shank portions of the two types of mouthpieces aren't the same length, yoiu simply want the large/standard shank variety to be inserted to exactly the same depth (i.e. distance from the shank end to the leadpipe end) in the receiver.
Okay, I take my trusty DW2 (besson small shank) and my bass-tbone-shank Bach 6 1/2AL mouthpieces and measure the outside diameter of the small end of the shank: 0.500 +/- 0.005. So I'll want the large shank mouthpeice to insert into the receiver where the inside diameter is now about 0.500".
Now I grab a PT-48 and a Bach 18 and measure the same part on their larger shanks: 0.525" for the Bach and 0.535" for the PT-48, which is what I'd expect, since the PT is a "European shank".
So, the job would seem to boil down to enlarging the point at which the receiver is 0.500" to 0.525" or maybe a bit larger if you're going to use European shank mouthpieces.
So, at first blush, it would seem that a Jarno 5 with a small end of 0.500 would be just the ticket.
But hang on--any reamer you''re going to pass down the receiver is going to cut a taper the entire length of the reamer's flutes. Ideally, we'd just want"a "step" at the point of insertion and not affect the way the leadpipe fits into the receiver, right? Otherwise, we end up cutting a taper the entire length of the receiver and wind up having to shim the leadpipe to get it to fit again (since we're not changing that, right?).
So why not this approach: Take a Jarno 5 and at around 0.520"-0.525" or so, cut ithe small end off (or grind it down, your choice) and then sharpen the ends of the flutes so that the reamer now functions as a mill at that point to cut our "step" into the receiver. The leadpipe insertion area remains unaffected and we have a recevier that fits our standard-shank mouthpieces.
Comments?
