Free: Contests & Raffles.
I suspect that breaking in a barrel is something that was a lot more important way back when, but modern manufacturing has probably removed most of the necessity.
Quote from: magnanimous_j on April 20, 2020, 08:46:56 AMI suspect that breaking in a barrel is something that was a lot more important way back when, but modern manufacturing has probably removed most of the necessity.unless its a new remington
The problem with determining whether it's fact or fiction is that there is a seemingly endless array of variables that, in aggregate, can wildly skew one's conclusion.Types of steel, types of bullets, heat, pressure, bullet design, chamber design, throat design, type of powder, button vs. cut vs. broach, type of rifling, rate of twist, bullet bearing surface, velocity, etc. Some of the variables, such as throat and barrel quality and wear, are easily measured assuming you have a Hawk Eye bore scope and some very expensive test tools.The rest of them are probably outside the realm of what 99.99% of shooters can replicate in very controlled environments. (It's a rare tester indeed who has a big-ass vice, a pile of identical barrels and ammo components, lab-grade precision reloading equipment, and an environmentally controlled 1,000 yard tunnel. )Bottom line...if it makes you feel better (and thereby gives you more confidence), do it. There's no harm in it IF you are cleaning it correctly. (That's a whole other thread!)Otherwise, barrels are like tires...they are only good for so long. Just go have fun and shoot...while stopping to clean the carbon ring build-up every now and then.
Quote from: Bushcraft on April 20, 2020, 07:54:35 PMThe problem with determining whether it's fact or fiction is that there is a seemingly endless array of variables that, in aggregate, can wildly skew one's conclusion.Types of steel, types of bullets, heat, pressure, bullet design, chamber design, throat design, type of powder, button vs. cut vs. broach, type of rifling, rate of twist, bullet bearing surface, velocity, etc. Some of the variables, such as throat and barrel quality and wear, are easily measured assuming you have a Hawk Eye bore scope and some very expensive test tools.The rest of them are probably outside the realm of what 99.99% of shooters can replicate in very controlled environments. (It's a rare tester indeed who has a big-ass vice, a pile of identical barrels and ammo components, lab-grade precision reloading equipment, and an environmentally controlled 1,000 yard tunnel. )Bottom line...if it makes you feel better (and thereby gives you more confidence), do it. There's no harm in it IF you are cleaning it correctly. (That's a whole other thread!)Otherwise, barrels are like tires...they are only good for so long. Just go have fun and shoot...while stopping to clean the carbon ring build-up every now and then. i couldn’t agree more
Quote from: grundy53 on April 19, 2020, 08:43:12 PMI've never broke one in. Just shot them.Sent from my SM-G950U using TapatalkThat's how you break them in 😂
I've never broke one in. Just shot them.Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk