We have had many barrels like this too. That's why I won't buy barrels from Gunsmiths on forums. You ever wonder why they have a lot of ten or so barrels for sale? It's all of the ones that weren't that straight. He's already bore-scoped them, And he's indicated them in to check straightness. I will buy them from regular guy's, But not known Gunsmith's. I like to buy them direct from the Mfg, But in times like these buying one from a forum speeds things along.This is not at all out of line with what I have observed either. I actually record this number in case over time it might tell me something. In last 10 barrels, all kreiger or bartlein I’ve had two at .050-60, several under .005, and the rest in between. That said, I haven’t found it equates to good or bad shooting in any way (yet) but it certainly doesn’t give me the warm fuzzies.
I know some good BR gun smiths. Guys that are paying attention, and their rifles are winning and breaking records. Not one will say that the straightness of a barrel will correlate to the accuracy of it. Nor will any waste time to dial them all in just to measure something that doesnt matter. I think someone has fed you some bs there. I have tracked this for years. There is zero correlation between bore straightness and accuracy. Not to mention the fact that selling something with a problem is dishonest. I remember selling some extra barrels a couple years ago. A guy asked if they were factory sealed in the cardboard. I said no, when you order 10 barrels they come in a crate, not in cardboard. He no longer wanted one. Its unfortunate he must have dealt with dishonest people to feel like that, but you cant measure or bore scope a barrel and know how it will shoot anyhow.
Slugging a barrel isn't going to tell you how straight a barrel is. I have no doubt that people bore scope barrels and pick the ones with the best finish.But how about slugging a barrel to get some idea of bore dimension consistency?
I agree. Im sure some do that. But they are fooling themselves. Slugging is the best way to try to evaluate a barrel. You dont want a tight one since it will build pressure. Theres some carbons out there that you probably want to be slugging. You also dont want one that loosens up. I have slugged some that loosen as the contour shrinks. Thats a heat treat issue. I had one that was really bad. It had a reverse taper. Guy didnt care and it was sub 1/2 moa on a hunting rifle in a magnum cartridge. Not that 1/5 moa is good, but the rifle limited that as much as the barrel. Just saying that you never can tell unless something is BAD.Slugging a barrel isn't going to tell you how straight a barrel is. I have no doubt that people bore scope barrels and pick the ones with the best finish.
I bought a barrel from you. I was warned. I put it on a gun and it’s a real hummer. My last match was a 200-15x with it and it won overall for the day.Obviously we want to see consistent grooves and relatively straight bores. That tells us the guy making them are doing a good job. Yes, I would prefer to have a barrel slug well, but one of the best barrels I have ever owned had a loose spot in it. So bad you could feel it with a path or brush. It would foul in that spot pretty bad too. The steel is the most important part of the barrel. Had I slugged that barrel I would not have used it, Id have sent it back and gave away one of the best barrels I ever owned. You just wont know until you shoot them.
Why would you? If theres an issue any decent barrel maker will replace it. You dont dump stuff on other guys. If a guy does that it will get around real fast. Inventory sitting around doesnt make sense. Periodically I go through it and list barrels or stocks sitting around. Im sure most guys do the same thing. I have been asked to go through my pile of barrels to look for "a good one". I say no, I will grab one and its yours. If it checks out poorly we will deal with the maker. But its not going back in the pile for the next guy. It should be luck of the draw. Thats fair in my mind. When chambering one for myself I grab one and throw it in the lathe chamber it and thats all there is to it. You just dont know until you shoot it.I bought a barrel from you. I was warned. I put it on a gun and it’s a real hummer. My last match was a 200-15x with it and it won overall for the day.
I didn’t think a well known guy would knowingly out a crap barrel out there.
Alex probably wouldn't but there are some that would. Some folks only care about the money, I've been burned a few times on forums, Well hidden defects by camera angles, Not so honest descriptions, Lying about round counts on rifles etc. But hey they got their money that's all that matters to them.I bought a barrel from you. I was warned. I put it on a gun and it’s a real hummer. My last match was a 200-15x with it and it won overall for the day.
I didn’t think a well known guy would knowingly out a crap barrel out there.
I'm certainly not trying to be argumentative, but what is "the best finish?" I've had a pile of barrels over the years from the top names in the business and the one barrel that stands out in my memory that had "the best finish" was the worst fouling barrel I ever had. It was beautiful inside.... and fouled so bad that you couldn't shoot it. 10 shots and it would take 2 hours to get the copper out of it. As has been pointed out previously in this thread, there's only one true way to evaluate a barrel, and that is to do the machine work on it and then shoot it. Anyone that thinks they can pick a winner out of a dozen barrels is kidding themself.Slugging a barrel isn't going to tell you how straight a barrel is. I have no doubt that people bore scope barrels and pick the ones with the best finish.
What i don't get is after you/gunsmith jump through all these hoops and get a perfectly aligned camber that hits the bore of the barrel just right why would you load ammo with jump?