Hey Guys! New here and for that matter very green when it comes to modern industrial electronics. I come here as most new members do...with a problem! I am getting into making gun barrels. One of biggest hangups now is with my rifling machine. This is a button rifling machine, and to generate the twist rate of the rifling, the machine uses a helicaly machined bar with a follower setup which turns the tool as the hydraulic ram pulls it through the barrel. The big problem is that I have such a range of barrels that I want to make, its going to take alot of helical bars to cover all the twists. The bars are not very easy to make. Plus, with all the mechanical equipment, it reduces the pulling range. I was looking last night at the manual for an indexing servo drive and it talked about "electronic gearing" how you can vary the input pulses to output pulses that drive the motor via ratios. Hmmm... This is would be the cats meow if I could get an encoder or a linear scale on the hydraulic ram to provide feedback for that axis, let's call it "X" Then for tool rotation axis let's call it "C" would be driven by a servo motor driven by the indexing servo drive. Using the electronic gear ratio, vary the pulses from the encoder on the X axis via the electronic gearing to generate the twist that is generated by "C" turning. So for example, if I need a 1:16 twist, the ram would move 16". If the encoder has a resolution of 100 pulses per inch...Drive takes 16,000 pulses per revolution of servo. So would be a 1:10 electronic gear ratio. I don't know, Like I said, this is new stuff to me, and I am looking to try to learn something, really would appreciate any thoughts or input!