Dovetail cutters

original: thehighroad.org
Retrieved: 11/12/11
Last Post: 02/17/11

HisSoldier
February 15, 2011

Hi, I have a .380 Guardian that came to me without sights. To me every gun should have sights, so I bought a large assortment of sights from off Gun broker. I found a nice combat rear of the right size and a small dovetaill front sight that should work in the small amount of space available.

The problem is that the front sight has a 40 degree dovetail, as measured using a loupe and holding the sight up to an angle measuring tool. Brownell's sells 65 and 60 degree cutters. I have a shaper, but I'm wondering if I found some kind of oddball sight?

The width of the dovetail at the narrowest point (top) is approximately .1875", approximately because the knife edges of the caliper actually have a flat on them, of course. The bottom of the dovetail measures .200, and the dovetail is .153 high. I guess I could use math to determine the angle but 40 degrees is very close.

I guess I'll cut a 3/16" endmill cut .155" deep and take it to the shaper to finish it out, it seems like a lot of work. Is there a wider variety of dovetail cutters available to gunsmiths? Thanks


john323
February 15, 2011

Try these guys http://www.mcmaster.com/ .


HisSoldier
February 16, 2011

I looked the site over, and saw no cutters that would cut small enough. I'll look at MSC tomorrow, but machinists typically don't use cutters that small either.


NCsmitty
February 16, 2011

Here's a site that shows dovetail cutters with different angles available, including 40 degree.

http://www.harveytool.com/products/i...FQFM5Qod2lGzeg


brickeyee
February 16, 2011

Be sure to use a straight mill to hog most of the waste.


HisSoldier
February 16, 2011

Yeah, at best those tiny cutters are wimpy. I might save the money by making a straight groove across and using the shaper, especially for the front sight with it's weird angle and shallow depth. I think the NAA guns are made of 17-4 stainless.


dirtyjim
February 17, 2011

Since you have a shaper I'd use it instead of trying to find the oddball dovetail cutter.

Shapers are getting harder to find for sale and I wish I would have picked one up about 15 years ago when I was working at a machine shop.


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