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OSI 1911 Jig User's Guide
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Finally, a one stop shopping tool kit for finishing the 1911 frames available from Tannery Shop. This includes the jig, slitting saw, and slide fitting file. All you need is a milling machine (even a small tabletop model like is shown here) or a good drill press with a sliding table or if you are really hard up, a coordinate vice.
The OSI 1911 finishing jig is the result of about a year's worth of part time
research and protoyping. This new jig system is about as idiot proof
and user friendly as I can make it. If you follow the directions
here and are halfway careful, you can have a usable 1911 frame within
hours. In addition, the jig has relief cuts which will allow for
fitting the slide rails even after you have installed the grip screw bushings or
plunger tube. This will make it possible for a non-FFL gunsmith to
fit parts on a 1911 frame and transfer it to a customer without cutting the
slide rails and the end user can use one of these jigs to finish out the slide
rails.
Here is a new style 1911 jig positioned in a small milling machine. It is important, but not critical, to periodically check the level on both the slitting saw and the jig rails. This will ensure a good even initial cut. This also is important to reference any settings on the milling machine that may wiggle off when the machine vibrates.
The level of the slitting saw and the desired rail should match. If not, adjust the position of the jig in the vice, the frame in the jig, and or the tilting head on the milling machine.
The new 1911 jig has enough
"wiggle room" in the plates to allow for minor adjustments to make
sure the frame sits even in the jig. I generally line it up with the
casting lines that are already in the jig, and then match the four corners of
the frame with the same elevation off the top plane of the jig. This
will ensure an even cut when you get to it with the slitting saw. The
slitting saw blade is a high speed steel which is not much harder (if any) than
the stainless steel frame I cam cutting here, so it is very important to go very
slow and take shallow cuts. Check your measurements a few times in
the operation just to make sure nothing has jiggled out of place.
Lining up the slitting saw is
very simple. Gently lower it down to where you get minimal contact
with the top plane of the jig and maybe .005 contact with the 1911
frame. Make your first contact with the frame somewhere behind the
front edge, not on the edge. Work your way first to the edge and
then back accross the length of the rail you are cutting. Make the
initial cuts shallow as the slitting saw will develop a "track" that
will keep it aligned as you continue cutting. Go at a slow cutting
speed until you get closer to your last finishing cuts where you will take fast
shallow cuts at a high bit speed to wipe out the machine
marks.
The cutting operation
in action. You can see the cutting oil dripping from the work piece.
The saw will chatter a bit and try to walk out of alignment, but if you keep a
gentle downward pressure on it, you can make sure it stays in contact with the
jig and rides the plane evenly enough to track an even cut as you gently feed
the milling table from side to side. If the frame is not held in a
jig at this point, it will easily snag and drag out of the narrow vice
jaws. The weight and strength of the jig keeps the work piece in the
vice, but you should check the vice from time to time to make sure it remains
clamped tight and is not working its way loose or onto an angle.
Here are frame rails that are
nearly finished. I am using a pretty trashed old slide for comparing the
fitting instead of bringing one of the nice slides into the workshop where it
can be scratched up. Once the frame rails are closer to where you
want them, it is time to finish up with the slide fitting file. The
3/32 slitting saw is set up to give you slightly narrow slide rail cuts so that
you will have enough material left to fit any available 1911 slide to your
Tannery Shop frame.
After a lot more parts
fitting work, you will be well on your way to a home built 1911 pistol that will
give you the pride and experience of doing it yourself. Here
is an example of my first 1911 built on a Tannery Shop frame using Chip
McCormick internals with a SARCO parts kit to produce a unique and functional
pistol. The ambi safety is fitted to function perfectly.
External finish is black baked on epoxy over Parkerizing. This
solved the aesthetic issues involved with using parts that have a mismatch
finish. The pistol frame you see being machined above will be left
in a natural stainless steel finish.