goalie wrote:God invented fouling shots for a reason. Clean. Shoot one or a group. Then put in the case.

Yeah, I brought that up. They're absolutely afraid of dirty rifles though. Our rifles are about 1moa off on the CCB shot with our duty ammo. I asked what a CB/DCB shot was, and I think it was about 0.5-0.75 MOA. I think it's a good reason for keeping a dirty bore, but whatever.
John's got several videos where he talks about cleaning related issues and whatnot. He's got a lot of good info elsewhere about how he only cleans his rifles when the accuracy drops off, and the rest of the time he cleans the chamber and runs a boresnake through to knock out the detritus. There's something to be said about getting 10k rounds out of a .308 barrel.
Snowgun wrote:I just called JP rifles about their break in Procedure.
The rep said that if I wanted to get the most out of my barrel that I have to follow the instructions:
(Clean, fire 20, then use JB bore compound. Then repeat two more times (fire 20 then use JB, fire 20 then use JB). Repeat again after 300 rds.)
Mystifying why they would be so adamant about this.
Snowgun wrote:xd ED wrote:Along with wondering if anything does anything positive, I have to wonder what 'getting the most out of it' means; long service life with moderate accuracy? Long interval between cleaning? Ease of cleaning? Superb accuracy?
Personally, what I might do to a gamer AR barrel is different than how many times I'd throw a long range bolt gun at a pile of gravel.
He said that if I want 0.624" groups, that I should follow the instructions. If I didn't give a **** about accuracy, I can do what I want.

Nothing against JP, but like what Gale McMillan alluded to years back, they have a vested interest in you needing a new barrel some day.
It's also of note that the mindset of break-in is subjective, and it's one of those things that is taught in certain circles and not taught in others. It just depends how you were trained, and that is how the whole cycle perpetuates (regardless of which side of the coin you're on). It's one of those great gun arguments that will never ever end. Just like pump vs semi shotguns and 9mm vs 45.
However, if they are claiming that .624" groups from an AR barrel is the top they can do, that's not very impressive. I have seen numerous AR barrels pulling sub-0.5MOA. I have one that currently shoots .460 MOA 5-shot groups. Not too sure I'd be bragging about .624" groups if I were them. Just my $0.02