What does your barrel manufacturer have to say about it?
Possibly started by the person Gale McMillan sold his barrel making equipment toHad a new Brux barrel installed on my F-Open savage last August. Was recommended that I do the shoot one clean for 5 rounds then shoot 3 then clean for 15 rounds then you are good to go. My question is where did this process originate? The new high end barrels today are finished way smoother than say 25 years ago.
Has anyone done a side by side with two identical barrels (same reamer, same caliber). I know that two barrels will not be exactly identical but probably close. Do the shoot and clean process on one and just shoot the other with no other cleaning procedure then test each side by side for accuracy and vertical. I'm betting the variance is going to be too small to make a difference.
Just my 2 cents worth.
It's been my understanding that the run in is to smooth the machining of the lede where it's cut during chambering.Has anyone done a side by side with two identical barrels (same reamer, same caliber). I know that two barrels will not be exactly identical but probably close. Do the shoot and clean process on one and just shoot the other with no other cleaning procedure then test each side by side for accuracy and vertical. I'm betting the variance is going to be too small to make a difference.
It's been my understanding that the run in is to smooth the machining of the lede where it's cut during chambering.
Put my first aftermarket barrel (shilen select match) on a savage single shot action for f-class last year, bought a box of Hornady superformance ammo, first 7 shots went into about a 1" group, kept shooting, suddenly the gun was smacking 1/2 moa groups! after 20 rounds went home and cleaned! My son and I shared that 6.5 creedmoor for our first 2 matches (about 250 rounds each match) and would clean on average about every 300 rounds. With hand-loads that gun is still shooting 5 shot 1/4" groups! That was my breakin!