I had it real bad on my 6mm Rem. Keep shooting for many years as long as it shot under 1" at 100. For GH hunting. I don't know what smoothing would accomplish. Lets face it, time for a new barrel. I'm on my 2nd barrel on my 6mm Rem, 6mm Rem Douglas then a 6BR Norma Krieger.In a 223 cal is there any way to smooth out the fire cracking ? I have it in about the first 2 inches of my barrel
Just to clarify, smoothing out means smoothing the edges of the fire cracking, not removing the fire cracking so the surface is all smooth.JB to smooth it out
Yes, I was thinking the same. Polishing it may take off the high spots but will do nothing for the bottom of the actual cracks in the metal. Once fire cracking starts, it propagates because the surface is roughened and just gets worse with time. Yes, polishing will help a little but my reamer design it intended to put off the start for as long as I can. First one so still yet to see how much difference it'll make.Just to clarify, smoothing out means smoothing the edges of the fire cracking, not removing the fire cracking so the surface is all smooth.
I go through ~ 10,000 223 rounds a season. If you had a way to make an AR barrel, I'd love to try out the design.Yes, I was thinking the same. Polishing it may take off the high spots but will do nothing for the bottom of the actual cracks in the metal. Once fire cracking starts, it propagates because the surface is roughened and just gets worse with time. Yes, polishing will help a little but my reamer design it intended to put off the start for as long as I can. First one so still yet to see how much difference it'll make.
My reamer is a 6 Grendel. I think the same has been done on other calibers though and I wanna say a 223 for ftr was one of them. You get a reamer and I can chamber it though. It'd be pretty tough to hit the number spot on but a 15° neck reamer may well work. I'd have to ponder it a bit.I go through ~ 10,000 223 rounds a season. If you had a way to make an AR barrel, I'd love to try out the design.
Most match barrels come to an end driven by combustion heat, cracking just after throat.It'd have to transition from your neck diameter, to 15° and then to 1.5°. It's doable but a chamber reamer would be a lot the easiest, I think. I do really think it has potential to greatly help bbl life more than you'd think, though. If I could interest you in a 6 Grendel project, I would. I have nothing but good things to say about it.
I make no claims either way yet because it's just a "logical theory" at this point...at least to me. Here's a copy and paste from a thread on here about it...fwiw.Most match barrels come to an end driven by combustion heat, cracking just after throat.
What exactly will a chamber design have to do with combustion related cracking?
David Tubbs if my memory is correct. He made abrasive coated bullets for smoothing the bore of crazy rough bores