Buck 89 said:I would not do it. I got a friend that ruin a broughton barrel and his friend done the same with his barrel. This is just some info.
Silverfox said:If I could figure out a way to work on cleaning the barrels BEFORE they were reinstalled on the actions, I think I would go that route.
That's an easy one! Clean the barrels before reinstalling them! I have had 4 barrels treated that are on personal rifles. I've, also, had about 35 others treated that went onto customers rifles. I always clean the bore before reinstalling it. Some clean up in an hour, some two hours. I include the clean up time in with the charge for treating (shipping, too). I have had nothing but positive results, whether treated at MMI or H&M. With some real 'elbow grease' applied (while cleaning) I or my customers have seen no degradation in accuracy, and a slight increase in velocity. Without a proper cleaning, I can see where accuracy might suffer.Silverfox said:If I could figure out a way to work on cleaning the barrels BEFORE they were reinstalled on the actions, I think I would go that route. I just worry about whether my rod guides would work well with no action to support them and only the short distance of the chamber to keep the rod straight. It was a real challenge to get the "junk" cleaned out of the chamber, but the chamber would have been a lot easier to clean BEFORE it was installed on the action.
What are the experiences of some of you other shooters with this barrel treatment process???
lexluthor364 said:Ok, so.....chrome lined barrels are what they are, cheap and inconsistent over time. It's a "layer" applied to the bore of the rifle barrel and in preparation of such, the barrel MUST be over bored to compensate for the thickness of the applied coating. After time, and a certain number of rounds, the chrome will actually wear away and expose the raw steel. As well as its inherent properties to cause fluctuations in its final product due to slight variations in its molecular structure, material preparation, quality of substrate, and in some cases, ambient temperature and weather all can lead to imperfections in the bore as highs and lows, Pitts, or even "chunks" that shorten barrel life or hinder it inaccurate right out of the box.
But it is easy and relatively cheap to do. Now nitride/melonite treatment (both are the same, just variants on the name) allow the rifle bore to be true and without "over boring " and allows for much tighter tolerances in the production process, increases hardness of the metal, and is bonded at a molecular level which makes it nearly impossible to remove, or be worn down. It's alot smoother which aids in the expelling of projectiles, and limits the ability of lubricants to cling with foreign particles attached. Oh, and it's comparably the same cost to do and much better of an end result. Compare this, two barrels both of equal length and twist (1:7 in this case which is by far the best twist) firing 5.56 nato fmj 55 grn. The chrome lined, chromium, AND stainless barrels started to dump off after 6K rounds belt fed on full auto. (yes even the beloved stainless steel barrel fails due to its brittle molecular structure) but the nitride/melonite barrel cruised through over 11K rounds and never looked back. Bore scope inspection noted "extreme wear and metal tear out on the chrome barrels, heat galling on the stainless (which is pretty dam bad) and minimal evidence of wear on the nitride/melonite barrel". I too WAS a chrome fan, but I have seen the light and will be converting to nitride/melonite asap. Build it for full battle conditions and it'll outlast whatever you do on a day to day basis, and if need be, your battle ready. I'm anxious to hear the replies and counter thoughts, I'm sure they'll be coming.
Changeling said:I have a question (I know nothing about these barrel coatings), something that is confusing me is as follows:
If you can fire 25 to 50 rounds before having this procedure done, why not a couple hundred when one can tell if his barrel is really worth saving relative to being capable of outstanding competition accuracy ?
This just didn't make sense to me! :![]()
Changeling said:Why would a barrel start showing alligator (cracking) with 200 rounds through it ?
gaboon said:The temperature that the steel is brought up to during this process is within the range that can remove the temper from the steel if not properly finished potentially causing the steel to become dangerous and not contain the pressures your cartridge will produce.