New barrel......
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Re: New barrel......
I guess you could always ask Diogenes for an opinion... :lol:
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Quidquid latine dictum sit altum viditur.
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CEO (Chief Excavatin' Officer)
Badger Korporashun
Quidquid latine dictum sit altum viditur.
"Quelle style, so British"
Re: New barrel......
I just came across this thread, so here's what I was told by the UK importer when I took delivery of the new Blaser LRS (heavy cold forged chrom-moly match barrel)
There is no need to shoot it in. Put 50 rounds through it, then just patch it through a couple of times after each session and oil lightly.
What I have noticed, is that compared to my Swing, there's hardly any powder residue visible if I look up the bore after firing, and the first patch is almost clean. I was surprised at this and I rang and asked the Blaser guy if there was some special surface treatment to the bore, He said no, it's manufactured to be free from any surface imperfection...........................which, I guess, is why replacement barrels are £1300 a pop.
There is no need to shoot it in. Put 50 rounds through it, then just patch it through a couple of times after each session and oil lightly.
What I have noticed, is that compared to my Swing, there's hardly any powder residue visible if I look up the bore after firing, and the first patch is almost clean. I was surprised at this and I rang and asked the Blaser guy if there was some special surface treatment to the bore, He said no, it's manufactured to be free from any surface imperfection...........................which, I guess, is why replacement barrels are £1300 a pop.
Re: New barrel......
I bought a Truflite barrel and ran it in with 1 shot and clean for the first 3 shots, then just put 5 through it and cleaned with Butches Boreshine and a phosphor bronze brush and checked it with a borescope. If there was any copper in I just cleaned it again until clear. Then just shot the thing for whatever competitions I was in and cleaned it at the end of the shoot.
The purpose of doing one shot and clean etc, is to keep the copper to a minimum and is easier to clean after one shot than five/ten etc, but also to smooth the 'rough' spots that tooling makes when the chamber is cut and the bullet will eventually smooth any machine marks down and as a result you get less copper in the barrel.
If there is a lot of copper after removing the carbon I have used Sweets 7.62 and 50BMG Copper Killer (which was the best for me) but I ran out and now just use Butches Boreshine and check with my borescope.
In factory barrels they make take a little longer to break in as they may possibly be a lot 'rougher' than barrels such as Krieger, Bartlein, Truflite, Border etc. So if you have a borescope that is the only way you will know how your barrel is being cleaned properly.
That is my view anyway.
The purpose of doing one shot and clean etc, is to keep the copper to a minimum and is easier to clean after one shot than five/ten etc, but also to smooth the 'rough' spots that tooling makes when the chamber is cut and the bullet will eventually smooth any machine marks down and as a result you get less copper in the barrel.
If there is a lot of copper after removing the carbon I have used Sweets 7.62 and 50BMG Copper Killer (which was the best for me) but I ran out and now just use Butches Boreshine and check with my borescope.
In factory barrels they make take a little longer to break in as they may possibly be a lot 'rougher' than barrels such as Krieger, Bartlein, Truflite, Border etc. So if you have a borescope that is the only way you will know how your barrel is being cleaned properly.
That is my view anyway.
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