Without a few more pictures a little farther down the barrel it’s hard to assess. It appears to be a light carbon build that is staining the low spots but your cleaning process has removed everything that could impede the bullet entering or traveling through the throat. I have a very difficult time getting this area of the barrel to shine as bright as a few inches further down the barrel and I stop cleaning as you have. The discoloration may be just a heat affected zone. I use a borescope to monitor my cleaning process and once I began to view the inside of the barrel, I had to improve my cleaning process considerably.This picture is from a new barrel with 300 rounds fired. Just completed cleaning without abrasives and saw this with a borescope. I am not sure if it is carbon or something else. Any suggestions on what this is and if it needs to be removed.
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You have that right for sure. I've never seen a barrel that badSome discoloration is normal, but Gary's Video likes like its never even had a patch down or any cleaning whatsoever.... Wow.
A bit of discoloration and a bit of carbon, is all. The transition is pretty rough.This picture is from a new barrel with 300 rounds fired. Just completed cleaning without abrasives and saw this with a borescope. I am not sure if it is carbon or something else. Any suggestions on what this is and if it needs to be removed.
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Amen!A clean patch only tells you nothing is being removed.
It isn't abnormal to see this pattern forming as it always starts at the facet from the neck to the freebore diameter and spreads downstream with cycles. When we run heavier bullets, we see it sooner.The neck freebore transition is what I was worried about. It looks like fire cracking but after 300 rounds I’m little surprised to see that. Then thought maybe it was a carbon buildup. I’m shooting at 2635 fps with Berger 200.20X, which I didn’t think was over loaded.
Should I address this or wait to see if it continues to grow?