According to Frank Green from Bartlein the R stands for Russian from where the original design came from not Radius. They don't get any more velocity but they do seem to clean a little easier.5R. R= Radius. Boots did design this style many years ago. You will tend to get higher velocities with the 5R. My 6BR is a 5R from Bartlein.
Swd got it correct .
The 1988 RIFLE MAGAZINE has a 3 part article on the dif types of rifling , the 5 R is covered in detail .
5R. R= Radius. Boots did design this style many years ago. You will tend to get higher velocities with the 5R. My 6BR is a 5R from Bartlein.
The 5R from Krieger is true 5R . Boots OK'd Krieger
to make it.................. Check the web page the story is out there.
The other 5R's are not the same.
I have a Bartlein 5R and a Benchmark 5R, neither of appear to me to have any velocity advantage or disadvantage in comparison to multiple 4-groove barrels that I also have chambered to 6Dasher.
Donovan
Correct! For the most part the style or number of grooves has no bearing on velocity etc....the surface area of the bore/groove etc...will have a bigger impact on pressures and velocities as well as your throat dimensions on the reamer etc...
We've made ammunition pressure test barrels in .308win., .300wm., 6.5 Creedmoor, .338 Lapua, etc....and all the data we've gotten back from ammunition makers and the military etc...there is basically no difference in velocities etc....This is actual test data when everything else is the same except the number/style of grooves and not based off of some shooter shooting this or that.
Later, Frank
Bartlein Barrels
A personal choice, or perhaps monkey see, monkey do.Now that the groove vs velocity question has been answered, let's circle back to the original question, what is/are the reason(s) that one would choose a 4, 5R or 6 groove barrel rather than one of the others?
A personal choice, or perhaps monkey see, monkey do.