jshuberg wrote:How exactly? By cleaning more frequently for the first two to three dozen rounds fired? I understand that many people think a break in procedure is unnecessary, but how exactly would it significantly reduce barrel life?
Erud wrote:goalie wrote:Rip Van Winkle wrote:Last summer at the National Matches I got to shoot and talk with Steve Satern of Satren Machining. I asked him his recommendation on barrel break in.
He said, "Just shoot the #$&@ thing and it'll be broke in".
I have heard many a Distinguished rifleman state that a GOOD barrel doesn't need a "break-in" also.
I feel like I'm a pretty Distinguished Rifleman and I don't break in barrels.
goalie wrote:I mean the kind of distinguished that comes from accumulating leg points......
Holland&Holland wrote:So what is the proper way to clean a barrel? I get that you need a single peice rod, I get that you want to go from the rear to not nick the crown, but beyond that if srubbing with a cloth patch what does that do? I have always heard single pass through but when using a slotted tip it is so tempting to scrub, how can cloth really do anything? And if it is the grim accumulating on the cloth how is that differnt than say a bore compond on the barrel? Or different than it being pushed down the barrel? You hear all the time not to over clean but then you also hear that people do not clean enough so what is clean and what is too clean and what is not clean enough? I am talking about barrels one is looking for accuracy out of here not your blaster AR or something. Also, I always wondered about cleaing semi-autos, say an M1 you want to use for matches, is the pull though what you need to invest in?
goalie wrote:Erud wrote:goalie wrote:Rip Van Winkle"]Last summer at the National Matches I got to shoot and talk with Steve Satern of Satren Machining. I asked him his recommendation on barrel break in.
He said, "Just shoot the #$&@ thing and it'll be broke in".
[quote="goalie wrote:I have heard many a Distinguished rifleman state that a GOOD barrel doesn't need a "break-in" also.
I feel like I'm a pretty Distinguished Rifleman and I don't break in barrels.
I mean the kind of distinguished that comes from accumulating leg points......
PowderBurn14 wrote:I am seeing quite a bit of copper in this new barrel of mine. I have been trying to get most of it out but like others have said how much fouling is too much and how much cleaning is too much. I know the barrel is new and rough but cleaning for hours a day is getting old fast.Thanks everyone for all the info.
Rip Van Winkle wrote:goalie wrote:I mean the kind of distinguished that comes from accumulating leg points......
Eric knows, he has his badge. With luck I'll earn mine this summer.
goalie wrote:Rip Van Winkle wrote:goalie wrote:I mean the kind of distinguished that comes from accumulating leg points......
Eric knows, he has his badge. With luck I'll earn mine this summer.
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The way he wrote it, I was thinking he was a smartass, not a hard-holding SOB.
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