I am not a Machinist but play one at home.

Several weeks ago when test flying a new airplane with Enya .45 found it has way more power than needed so made 4 different size ventures in about 3-4hrs.
Will try to keep it short.
First dug around to find some stock to work from. Found a piece of .75od round aluminum stock.
Then found 4 drill bits that were the biggest, smallest and 2 in between in the size range needed.
Centered the stock in the chuck(4 jaw) and with drill bit in chuck drilled with the smallest of the 4chosen bits.
As long as you do not remove stock from chuck it need not be accurately centered as id and od will be cut and it will become true as work progresses.
Feed the smallest bit into stock, can go to the depth that will make all 4 ventures as each next one will be bigger.
Then machine the outside to the necessary dimensions.
NOTE:
Set cutting tool just barely below the center line of part for good cutting.
The part will gain heat and expand so let it cool or dump some water on it for the fine measure final cut.
If left slightly big it can later be worked/polished down to fit.
After outside is finished I have a long tapered burr ( that I use porting auto cylinder heads) that gets chucked in tail stock and fed into part to form the inside 'flair'.
After that I use a bigger than od of part drill to make the top of the 'flair'
Now with 80 grit paper(or something) rolled into a tube to blend the 'Flair"
going to finer grit until i like it.
Now part it of at the right location.
Now go to the next size up drill bit and do it all again.
They came out nice.
For spray bar that passes through venturi find drill bit that comes closest to fitting spray bar hole in crankcase then slip venturi in and hold tight while inserting and turning bit by HAND to 'center punch' the location.
The deeper the better.
Remove venturi from case.
I then drill with smaller bit and the to correct size.
Like I said ' not a machinist'
I do have several types of lath and milling machine and other odd stuff.(can do all auto type work except turn crank.)
My South bend screw was shipped to the Alameda naval air station at the outbreak of WWII!
Have also made them from brass tube one inside the other and also made sprinkler type using brass tube.
When one(or several) is inside the other flaring with brake line flaring tool works and makes a stop as well as distorting things in the barrel area making it basically a solid piece.
Hope this helps some!
David
WOW!
I must be really slow typist! there was only 2 post when I started!