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Brux customer service

I love my Brux barrels; all past and present. Have shot them all it seems over the many years and for me Brux is by far the easiest to tune and clean and as someone else said they flat out "hammer".
 
Brux is and has been the maker of premium barrels. Their attention to detail is part of the reason. The following excerpt shows some of their exceptional efforts to insure a quality product. James


After cutting to length, the blank is rough turned in a lathe. Next, it is drilled with a Barnes gun drill by an “oil-through” process. The barrel is drilled at 3600 RPM’s while being flushed with the oil. This drills the barrel to 0.005 inch under “land” diameter at a rate of 1 inch per minute.
The barrel is then thoroughly cleaned and sent back to the lathe to finish the contour of the outside.
After another cleaning, the blank is reamed on a Pratt and Whitney reamer in another “oil-through” process. The 0.005 inch left in the drilling process is reamed away in order to give the proper “land” diameter.
After yet another cleaning, the barrel is lapped to remove any slight tool marks left by the reamer. The barrel is inspected with a borescope and goes no further if it does not meet the strict Brux standards.
After another cleaning, the barrel goes to the rifling machine. In a 4-groove barrel like the one I have, each groove is cut separately. (i.e. Single point rifling) After a small amount is scraped from the first groove, the blank is rotated 90 degrees. After four of these rotations (360 degrees), the rifling cutter head is raised to shave off the next bit of material. This process is repeated over and over until the proper groove diameter is reached.
Once again the barrel is cleaned. After the cleaning, it is given a final lapping. This is to ensure an ultra-smooth bore. The barrel receives another inspection with the borescope before being cleaned and packaged for shipment.
Although many think that premium barrels are overpriced, all one has to do is read the above to dispel that notion.
 
Sounds like the process most premium barrel makers adhere to. A good barrel, is a good barrel. No matter the the procedure used to make it.
 
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