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Barrel Indexing and Barrel Nut

I was reading this thread and a response by Trevor (screen name Hengehold), and it got me to wondering about a potential downside of a barrel nut design.

http://forum.accurateshooter.com/threads/indexing-a-rifle-barrel.3902203/

Bottom line, with a barrel nut, the barrel is screwed in until headspace is correct, and then a jam nut is used to keep the barrel locked to the receiver. There is no "indexing" of the bore curvature to 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock. The bore curvature "plane" is just where it happens to land, at any possible "o'clock" position. Correct?

With a conventional barrel shoulder design, the gunsmith can chamber and machine the barrel so that when it is fully secured into the action, the barrel bore curvature can be oriented where ever the smith wants it.

Am I misunderstanding or missing something?

Phil

Trevor's comments.

"...Great question. The Long answer to your short question is that indexing a barrel in a 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock position is giving it The best possible state of harmonics to start with.

To illustrate what is happening you can try an exercise with a cleaning rod secured near the handle in a vice. First, Flick the end of the cleaning rod straight up-and-down and watch the pattern of movement of the tip of the cleaning rod until movement comes to a stop. second, try flicking the cleaning rod left and right and watch the pattern of movement of the cleaning rod until the mvmt has come to a stop. You will notice that when you flick the cleaning rod in an up-and-down motion that as the cleaning rod eventually stops whipping up and down it stays in a vertical plane. However, when you flick the cleaning rod in a lateral motion you'll notice that before it comes to rest the whip pattern of the cleaning rod is lateral then circular before eventually making a vertical motion. This cleaning rod is representing the action of a barrel that is whipping while being shot. A barrel that is whipping only in a vertical plane would have only one movement to overcome. A barrel with a lateral movement would eventually have to overcome not just the lateral movement but a circular motion and eventually a vertical mvmt as you will see demonstrated with a cleaning rod.The idea of indexing a bore in the 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock positions can be tested and realized with a barrel mounted rest.

If you were to place a barreled action in a rest and shoot groups rotating 90° after each group you will find that the barrel will shoot groups in a different location for each 90° rotation. In other words the point of impact will change on paper each time you rotate the barrel. At 100 yds I would typically see a point of impact shift of several inches per 90 degree rotation. Additionally, you will find that the groups in the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions will be smaller groups than the groups found in the 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock areas. I have conducted this experiment with about a dozen different smallbore barrels and I have never seen a barrel that did not shoot it's best groups in the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions. The difference in group sizes that I experienced was that the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock groups would consistently be around half the size of the lateral groups found in the 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock positions. This was true of all ammunition tested from the high dollar Lapua and Eley to the lower-priced SK and Wolf ammunition.

As a sidenote, the rest that I used was a barrel mounted fixture that could absorb some recoil and return to battery in the same position every time and was mounted onto a mill and shot at 100 yards.

This practice of barrel indexing is primarily useful in smallbore where tuning the ammunition to the rifle is not an option. I have conducted the same experiment with high-powered rifles but the rest that I have does not handle the recoil as well as smallbore rifles. When I conducted this experiment with a couple of high-powered rifles I did see similar results as the barreled action was rotated in which the groups found in a vertical plane such as the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions were the smallest groups and the groups found in a lateral plane at the 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock positions were the biggest groups.

My experience with bore indexing has been a trial and error method rather then a measure and cut method. Without conducting a trial and error approach, one would never see the resulting reduction in group sizes for the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions . .

Sorry for the dissertation but I have a unique amount of experience with testing indexed barrels. I hope this helps.

-Trevor...".
 
I was reading this thread and a response by Trevor (screen name Hengehold), and it got me to wondering about a potential downside of a barrel nut design.

http://forum.accurateshooter.com/threads/indexing-a-rifle-barrel.3902203/

Bottom line, with a barrel nut, the barrel is screwed in until headspace is correct, and then a jam nut is used to keep the barrel locked to the receiver. There is no "indexing" of the bore curvature to 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock. The bore curvature "plane" is just where it happens to land, at any possible "o'clock" position. Correct?

With a conventional barrel shoulder design, the gunsmith can chamber and machine the barrel so that when it is fully secured into the action, the barrel bore curvature can be oriented where ever the smith wants it.

Am I misunderstanding or missing something?

Phil

Trevor's comments.

"...Great question. The Long answer to your short question is that indexing a barrel in a 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock position is giving it The best possible state of harmonics to start with.

To illustrate what is happening you can try an exercise with a cleaning rod secured near the handle in a vice. First, Flick the end of the cleaning rod straight up-and-down and watch the pattern of movement of the tip of the cleaning rod until movement comes to a stop. second, try flicking the cleaning rod left and right and watch the pattern of movement of the cleaning rod until the mvmt has come to a stop. You will notice that when you flick the cleaning rod in an up-and-down motion that as the cleaning rod eventually stops whipping up and down it stays in a vertical plane. However, when you flick the cleaning rod in a lateral motion you'll notice that before it comes to rest the whip pattern of the cleaning rod is lateral then circular before eventually making a vertical motion. This cleaning rod is representing the action of a barrel that is whipping while being shot. A barrel that is whipping only in a vertical plane would have only one movement to overcome. A barrel with a lateral movement would eventually have to overcome not just the lateral movement but a circular motion and eventually a vertical mvmt as you will see demonstrated with a cleaning rod.The idea of indexing a bore in the 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock positions can be tested and realized with a barrel mounted rest.

If you were to place a barreled action in a rest and shoot groups rotating 90° after each group you will find that the barrel will shoot groups in a different location for each 90° rotation. In other words the point of impact will change on paper each time you rotate the barrel. At 100 yds I would typically see a point of impact shift of several inches per 90 degree rotation. Additionally, you will find that the groups in the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions will be smaller groups than the groups found in the 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock areas. I have conducted this experiment with about a dozen different smallbore barrels and I have never seen a barrel that did not shoot it's best groups in the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions. The difference in group sizes that I experienced was that the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock groups would consistently be around half the size of the lateral groups found in the 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock positions. This was true of all ammunition tested from the high dollar Lapua and Eley to the lower-priced SK and Wolf ammunition.

As a sidenote, the rest that I used was a barrel mounted fixture that could absorb some recoil and return to battery in the same position every time and was mounted onto a mill and shot at 100 yards.

This practice of barrel indexing is primarily useful in smallbore where tuning the ammunition to the rifle is not an option. I have conducted the same experiment with high-powered rifles but the rest that I have does not handle the recoil as well as smallbore rifles. When I conducted this experiment with a couple of high-powered rifles I did see similar results as the barreled action was rotated in which the groups found in a vertical plane such as the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions were the smallest groups and the groups found in a lateral plane at the 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock positions were the biggest groups.

My experience with bore indexing has been a trial and error method rather then a measure and cut method. Without conducting a trial and error approach, one would never see the resulting reduction in group sizes for the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions . .

Sorry for the dissertation but I have a unique amount of experience with testing indexed barrels. I hope this helps.

-Trevor...".
Indexing a barrel with a nut takes more time then without. With a tennon you decrease head space .
With a nut you increase head space . Is headspace that critical not really. Larry
 
"Bottom line, with a barrel nut, the barrel is screwed in until headspace is correct, and then a jam nut is used to keep the barrel locked to the receiver. There is no "indexing" of the bore curvature to 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock. The bore curvature "plane" is just where it happens to land, at any possible "o'clock" position. Correct?

With a conventional barrel shoulder design, the gunsmith can chamber and machine the barrel so that when it is fully secured into the action, the barrel bore curvature can be oriented where ever the smith wants it.

Am I misunderstanding or missing something?

Phil"

No, you are not missing anything. I will use a Ruger RPR in example. It has a tenon with 16 tpi. One revolution of the barrel moves the headspace 0.0625". Let's say that you don't care if the barrel curvature is dead 'up' or down'...just in the vertical plane (ignore the fact, for a moment, that it is not a simple arc but more of a helix). If your barrel set with clearance on the 'go' gauge of 0.002" has the 'curvature' in the horizontal plane, 90deg. to the desired plane, then you will have to rotate it to the vertical which adds 0.0156" to the headspace. I don't care for case head separation much...just my preference;)....so I would have to settle on a rotation that gets me the best compromise between safe HS and barrel indexing. Vertical indexing could be reliably accomplished for a drop in if the dimensions of the receiver/bolt face would have very precise manufacturing tolerances hit for each unit made and that would be unlikely short of a full custom action. Accidents do happen and one might get lucky however. I am not aware that drop in barrel makers are trying to index their products. Someone correct me if I am wrong.
 
I was reading this thread and a response by Trevor (screen name Hengehold), and it got me to wondering about a potential downside of a barrel nut design.

http://forum.accurateshooter.com/threads/indexing-a-rifle-barrel.3902203/

Bottom line, with a barrel nut, the barrel is screwed in until headspace is correct, and then a jam nut is used to keep the barrel locked to the receiver. There is no "indexing" of the bore curvature to 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock. The bore curvature "plane" is just where it happens to land, at any possible "o'clock" position. Correct?

With a conventional barrel shoulder design, the gunsmith can chamber and machine the barrel so that when it is fully secured into the action, the barrel bore curvature can be oriented where ever the smith wants it.

Am I misunderstanding or missing something?

Phil

Trevor's comments.

"...Great question. The Long answer to your short question is that indexing a barrel in a 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock position is giving it The best possible state of harmonics to start with.

To illustrate what is happening you can try an exercise with a cleaning rod secured near the handle in a vice. First, Flick the end of the cleaning rod straight up-and-down and watch the pattern of movement of the tip of the cleaning rod until movement comes to a stop. second, try flicking the cleaning rod left and right and watch the pattern of movement of the cleaning rod until the mvmt has come to a stop. You will notice that when you flick the cleaning rod in an up-and-down motion that as the cleaning rod eventually stops whipping up and down it stays in a vertical plane. However, when you flick the cleaning rod in a lateral motion you'll notice that before it comes to rest the whip pattern of the cleaning rod is lateral then circular before eventually making a vertical motion. This cleaning rod is representing the action of a barrel that is whipping while being shot. A barrel that is whipping only in a vertical plane would have only one movement to overcome. A barrel with a lateral movement would eventually have to overcome not just the lateral movement but a circular motion and eventually a vertical mvmt as you will see demonstrated with a cleaning rod.The idea of indexing a bore in the 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock positions can be tested and realized with a barrel mounted rest.

If you were to place a barreled action in a rest and shoot groups rotating 90° after each group you will find that the barrel will shoot groups in a different location for each 90° rotation. In other words the point of impact will change on paper each time you rotate the barrel. At 100 yds I would typically see a point of impact shift of several inches per 90 degree rotation. Additionally, you will find that the groups in the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions will be smaller groups than the groups found in the 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock areas. I have conducted this experiment with about a dozen different smallbore barrels and I have never seen a barrel that did not shoot it's best groups in the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions. The difference in group sizes that I experienced was that the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock groups would consistently be around half the size of the lateral groups found in the 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock positions. This was true of all ammunition tested from the high dollar Lapua and Eley to the lower-priced SK and Wolf ammunition.

As a sidenote, the rest that I used was a barrel mounted fixture that could absorb some recoil and return to battery in the same position every time and was mounted onto a mill and shot at 100 yards.

This practice of barrel indexing is primarily useful in smallbore where tuning the ammunition to the rifle is not an option. I have conducted the same experiment with high-powered rifles but the rest that I have does not handle the recoil as well as smallbore rifles. When I conducted this experiment with a couple of high-powered rifles I did see similar results as the barreled action was rotated in which the groups found in a vertical plane such as the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions were the smallest groups and the groups found in a lateral plane at the 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock positions were the biggest groups.

My experience with bore indexing has been a trial and error method rather then a measure and cut method. Without conducting a trial and error approach, one would never see the resulting reduction in group sizes for the 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock positions . .

Sorry for the dissertation but I have a unique amount of experience with testing indexed barrels. I hope this helps.

-Trevor...".
you cant index a savage with a nut, because its already headspaced...you get what you get. I was taught to index at 12 O Click in order to preserve the windage on your scope. a barrel indexed at 3 or 9 oclock will consume scope windage just to get a zero. Pick a 6 o clock or 12 o clock index depending on whether you want to add or subtract elevation from your rail.

Barrel harmonics and indexing? Never seen any evidence that exists.
 
"Bottom line, with a barrel nut, the barrel is screwed in until headspace is correct, and then a jam nut is used to keep the barrel locked to the receiver. There is no "indexing" of the bore curvature to 12 o'clock or 6 o'clock. The bore curvature "plane" is just where it happens to land, at any possible "o'clock" position. Correct?

With a conventional barrel shoulder design, the gunsmith can chamber and machine the barrel so that when it is fully secured into the action, the barrel bore curvature can be oriented where ever the smith wants it.

Am I misunderstanding or missing something?

Phil"

No, you are not missing anything. I will use a Ruger RPR in example. It has a tenon with 16 tpi. One revolution of the barrel moves the headspace 0.0625". Let's say that you don't care if the barrel curvature is dead 'up' or down'...just in the vertical plane (ignore the fact, for a moment, that it is not a simple arc but more of a helix). If your barrel set with clearance on the 'go' gauge of 0.002" has the 'curvature' in the horizontal plane, 90deg. to the desired plane, then you will have to rotate it to the vertical which adds 0.0156" to the headspace. I don't care for case head separation much...just my preference;)....so I would have to settle on a rotation that gets me the best compromise between safe HS and barrel indexing. Vertical indexing could be reliably accomplished for a drop in if the dimensions of the receiver/bolt face would have very precise manufacturing tolerances hit for each unit made and that would be unlikely short of a full custom action. Accidents do happen and one might get lucky however. I am not aware that drop in barrel makers are trying to index their products. Someone correct me if I am wrong.
Not ever gun smith index barrel any way .
Larry
 
I have found on my 2 Sav target receivers, Any particular barrel will have more or less bow in it, so a perfect machined action won't fix that, I've gone nut less because of that. When using the nut one of my barrels wouldn't hit the x at 600yds without a 20MOA rail, that was an example of 6 0'clock indexing. To correct that without a reamer you would have to increase your headspace by .025". That seems to be the major downfall of a barrel nut.
 
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I have found on my 2 Sav target receivers, Any particular barrel will have more or less bow in it, so a perfect machined action won't fix that, I've gone nut less because of that. When using the nut one of my barrels wouldn't hit the x at 600yds without a 20MOA rail, that was an example of 6 0'clock indexing. To correct that without a reamer you would have to increase your headspace by .025". That seems to be the major downfall of a barrel nut.
To correct that you need a barrel that isn't that that far out to begin with. Larry
 
Let's not compare swapping a Salvage barrel with a pre-fit and not utilizing a lathe to index it, to a barrel that's being chambered and indexed on a lathe.

Shouldn't make a difference weather it's gotta barrel nut or not. More like weather you have a lathe or not.

Trim the breach and cut chamber deeper same amount, done.

I'm no gunsmith so I could be wrong :p

I don't care about indexing a barrel unless it's fluted, or has some writing on it that I wanna hide or show, or in some cases a muzzle brake.


Please correct me if I'm wrong and be gentle on me :D
 
Let's not compare swapping a Salvage barrel with a pre-fit and not utilizing a lathe to index it, to a barrel that's being chambered and indexed on a lathe.

Shouldn't make a difference weather it's gotta barrel nut or not. More like weather you have a lathe or not.

Trim the breach and cut chamber deeper same amount, done.

I'm no gunsmith so I could be wrong :p

I don't care about indexing a barrel unless it's fluted, or has some writing on it that I wanna hide or show, or in some cases a muzzle brake.


Please correct me if I'm wrong and be gentle on me :D
Only if the threads is cut straight with the bore. Many are chambered off the off the OD and it is not true to the bore . Larry
 
Let's not compare swapping a Salvage barrel with a pre-fit and not utilizing a lathe to index it, to a barrel that's being chambered and indexed on a lathe.

Shouldn't make a difference weather it's gotta barrel nut or not. More like weather you have a lathe or not.

Trim the breach and cut chamber deeper same amount, done.

I'm no gunsmith so I could be wrong :p

I don't care about indexing a barrel unless it's fluted, or has some writing on it that I wanna hide or show, or in some cases a muzzle brake.
Please correct me if I'm wrong and be gentle on me :D
To me the only reason to use a prefit is if you don't have access to a lathe. Since I've got a lathe I don't want to settle for a barrel nut unless I get some really cheap barrels that have to small a diameter to create a shoulder on a R700.
 
To me the only reason to use a prefit is if you don't have access to a lathe. Since I've got a lathe I don't want to settle for a barrel nut unless I get some really cheap barrels that have to small a diameter to create a shoulder on a R700.
The trouble with most after market barrels the chamber end is 1.250 target action is
1. 119 I don't believe that is enough for a shoulder . Larry
 
To me the only reason to use a prefit is if you don't have access to a lathe. Since I've got a lathe I don't want to settle for a barrel nut unless I get some really cheap barrels that have to small a diameter to create a shoulder on a R700.

A suitable lathe and sufficient skill/experience to do the job. I have a lathe, that is not adequate, just like my skills...at this point anyway. - Phil
 
A suitable lathe and sufficient skill/experience to do the job. I have a lathe, that is not adequate, just like my skills...at this point anyway. - Phil
Phil-- Well yes that is what I meant. Once a person has made the investment in effort to learn what you need to know and Money to buy the required equipment you feel like you shouldnt be buying prefits. I do anyhow. In fact I have a brand new remage Im gonna sell-- I purchased it prelathe.

Larry Not sure what you meant but yes the premium quality barrels I buy generally have 1.25 barrel shanks. I keep a savage or Rem 783 around to use with the barrels not large enough in dia for a shoulder. You only need 1.062 for a rem 700 and a little less I think 1.055 for a savage/rem 783 if you dont mind nutting it.
 
Phil-- Well yes that is what I meant. Once a person has made the investment in effort to learn what you need to know and Money to buy the required equipment you feel like you shouldnt be buying prefits. I do anyhow. In fact I have a brand new remage Im gonna sell-- I purchased it prelathe.

Larry Not sure what you meant but yes the premium quality barrels I buy generally have 1.25 barrel shanks. I keep a savage or Rem 783 around to use with the barrels not large enough in dia for a shoulder. You only need 1.062 for a rem 700 and a little less I think 1.055 for a savage/rem 783 if you dont mind nutting it.
I said target action . Larry
 
Okay Im not involved with savage target actions at all so I don't know about them except I do know they are large shank. I should have said small shank savages in my post.
No problem .
6 year ago I had a small shank savage 116 hand gun . Put a dasher barrel on it . It was a 10 twist It was fun but bullets it was too lite for 1000 I have long action 06 my son shot . My grand so was 9 so I decited to put The long action I was going to have to cut 1 3/4 off . So I cut the Remington threads and chambered it . I cut the savage thread with a die . Using the savage lug and nut Ended up with a long action Remington with savage lug and nut dasher short hunting gun Took a 40x 308 with a target stock Then he can shoot 600 yards Put the same combination on the other two barrels . Best thing I ever done . Larry
 
Let's not compare swapping a Salvage barrel with a pre-fit and not utilizing a lathe to index it, to a barrel that's being chambered and indexed on a lathe.

Shouldn't make a difference weather it's gotta barrel nut or not. More like weather you have a lathe or not.

Trim the breach and cut chamber deeper same amount, done.

I'm no gunsmith so I could be wrong :p

I don't care about indexing a barrel unless it's fluted, or has some writing on it that I wanna hide or show, or in some cases a muzzle brake.


Please correct me if I'm wrong and be gentle on me :D
No Takers? I'm in. Zero, it is my opinion that you are correct and this method allows you to "index" a barrel. I think this "indexing" thing
is a bit on the "magical myth" side. Repeatable barrel harmonics make a barrel work and bullet weight, powder burn rate, fps, barrel length, taper, etc
all influence a barrels' vibrations for repeatability. If the barrel is so skewed you have to add a 20 MOA rail just to have enough elevation to get on paper at 300 you have bigger issues than "indexing".
 

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