jxb
Gold $$ Contributor
Great info Frank, thanks for sharing. That last part is interesting. Did you test groups while doing this test to see how they differed throughout? Would be interesting to see.Inside of the bore of the barrel will always heat up faster than the outside of the barrel. If I recall correctly the heat temp at the throat area every time you shoot around the flame temp is around 2200-4000F depending on the powder/cartridge etc...your not stopping what's happening inside the bore every time you light that round off.
On a temperature test we just ran exactly a year ago... it was a short test but from a cold barrel (308win was the caliber on both of them and we shot an all steel barrel and a CFW barrel at the same time and same cadence) the inside of the barrels (we measured the chamber end and muzzle end on both inside and outside of the barrels) for every 3 rounds fired the temp jumped basically 10 degrees for every 3 rounds fired. This basically applied to each one. The all steel barrel (M40/M24 contour) didn't heat up as fast as the CFW barrel by only a few degrees but once up to basically the same temp... the CFW barrel on a measured 7 min cool down period did cool to a cooler temperature than the heavy all steel barrel did.
Again though... you are not stopping what's happening to the inside of the bore of the barrel during shooting.
Later, Frank