Honest question that some of the smart guys on here can answer. I know convential wisdom is that shooting a barrel when hot greatly increases the rate of throat erosion. I do not doubt this and as a FTR shooter I accept there are times I will do all I can to torch a barrel in a calm or steady condition. On a really hot day it is not uncommon to get a barrel north of 200 degrees.
My question is why this 200 degree headstart causes a increase in the wear on the barrels throat when the heat potential starts at a low of 3720 degrees for VV N140 to a high of 4050 degrees for Varget among the typical FTR powders. I assumes that amount of heat generated during firing is actually higher than those numbers as we are inducing high pressures during the actual powder burn. In my mind this extra 200 ish degrees is within the variance of different powders and the phrase match on a fire comes to mind.
Not going to try and convince anyone that you shouldn't worry about getting barrels hot, just looking for an explanation of what is the mechanism of increaed barrel wear.
My question is why this 200 degree headstart causes a increase in the wear on the barrels throat when the heat potential starts at a low of 3720 degrees for VV N140 to a high of 4050 degrees for Varget among the typical FTR powders. I assumes that amount of heat generated during firing is actually higher than those numbers as we are inducing high pressures during the actual powder burn. In my mind this extra 200 ish degrees is within the variance of different powders and the phrase match on a fire comes to mind.
Not going to try and convince anyone that you shouldn't worry about getting barrels hot, just looking for an explanation of what is the mechanism of increaed barrel wear.