Will I get more life out of a 3 groove bbl ? Pros and Cons ? Just burned up a 22/250 8"twist bbl. I don't need to shoot the heavy bullets . Thinking of a 12" twist Muller Works bbl.
If your handloading only, and where consistent accuracy is conserned, use a 3 grove, if using factory ammo use a 5 grove, 5 grove barrels are generally more forgiving
I was told by one rifle builder who does some of the hot-rod calibers that a barrel with less grooves & 5R & 5C type rifling are not as hard on the jackets of bullets when a tight twist is being used to stabilize long heavy bullets at higher velocities, which makes sense at least to me.
I believe you have missed the point
The information that I gave was a directly quote from Pac-nor barrels not more than three days ago when I was asking about there 3 and 5 grove barrels, I was only trying to add to the conversation, sorry for ruffling your feathers.Negative - No point missed in my statement or line of thinking. - I'm NOT here to argue of kick up dust so I won't ask you for any evidence to back up what you've stated. - I'm movin on
For me, with high round count varminting as my primary use, 3 grooves have lasted significantly longer in the leade area, very slow regression compared to 6 grooves same caliber, same load, same round count. In 20, 22, and 6mm. Can't comment on accuracy differences, good ones shoot well regardless of groove/land count.