Rustystud said:I guess I have to do everything different.
First, I never part off barrels in the lathe. I cut them with a band saw. I then dial them in the lathe and use a center drill to open up the new muzzle end. Then I use piloted tooling 79* or 90* to turn the new crown. I finish the crown with 1000 grit emery cloth for a mirror finish with no burs.
The reason do this is single point tooling induces stress into the barrel and tends to distort the bore. Usually causing a tight place in the muzzle.
Dave Kiff at PT&G, Dave Manson and Manson Precision Reamers, and JGS all make these piloted tools.
Nat Lambeth
watercam said:FWIW there was a article in Precision Shooting (RIP) about this very comparison (regardless of the technique to accomplish the job). Johnson or Johnston I believe was the author - hunband/wife team of Long Range rifle builders. In it they essentially said they could not see any difference between the two. I needed to re-cut a crown on one of my Palma rifles - cut both on the same barrel. Same group sizes at 600 yds. w/ match boat-tail bullets.
civil82 said:There was also a PS article several years ago where the author intentionally damaged the crown to varying degrees and group tested. If I remeber right, he used a chisel and ball peen. Some of the results were quite surprising.
newgun said:I remember reading a test were they cut and or distorted the end of bullets and was all so surprised at the results. At short range
I really really miss p.s. mag. all so.