I have a question for the Benchrest shooters. This question has nagged at me for quite some time and it's time to ask. QUESTION: It has been my experience that after a R-E-A-L-L-Y good barrel scrubbing, depending on the "age" of the barrel, it takes at least 4-5 shots on a new barrel and up to 10-12 rounds on an "older" barrel, to get the barrel to "settle down" and start shooting well. How do y'all clean so often and get the barrel to settle in after maybe a shot or two in order to shoot a competitive group? This blows my mind.. Thanks..
So this morning I went to the range with a clean barrel. 6 shots to get zeroed in and I then shot a 2” 5 shot group at 1K followed by a 3” 5 shot group testing two different neck tensions. I’ll never know, or care, what it took to “settle down”. Maybe it was 2, maybe 6, all I cared about was being zeroed in.
I suppose the answer to your question may well be that it all depends on the accuracy level you are seeking and the discipline you shoot. In bench rest we can fire unlimited sighters prior to the score target being raised. That is not the case in other disciplines. Sometimes cleaning is not an option because of time constraints.
What I question is how people justify not cleaning if they have the option to? Would you shoot with dirty lenses on your scope? Would you chamber rounds after you dropped them in the mud? Sometimes I just wonder if some people use the old “ you can do more damage to a barrel by cleaning it than by shooting it” because they really don’t like cleaning.
Dave.