What's your definition of a well seasoned barrel?Hi Landy, Thanks for posting you findings and testing results. I was wondering have you found any correlation between a well seasoned barrel and a overly fouled barrel as it relates to velocity.
in other words does it have an effect if fouling affects velocity.
Lee
I've heard of some shooters who believe it may take upwards of 50 rds in a thoroughly clean barrel to become well seasoned!
I'm sure you and others who hang out on RFC have heard the same, and most of the time they're working with factory barrels or barrels of unknown quality that we never use in RFBR.
The most common explanation I've heard over the years for this phenomenon, that makes any sense to me at all, is that these barrels have rough or pitted bores and it takes that many rds to fill the pores resulting in a smoother bore. I find this doubtful, but I don't have enough data to either support or refute because I try to always work with the quality barrels most often used in RFBR.
Anyway, the above may or may not be an exception to the rule that you have to at least be aware of and my response is only relevant for the myriad of BR quality barrels I've tested over many years.
The other problem I have in making a response to your question is that I rarely test until I reach whatever the definition of an overly fouled bore is. So what is an overly fouled barrel? LOL
The question is rhetorical and I don't have a definitive answer, but overly fouled has to mean the point where you see measurable changes in velocity over a very long series of shots or measurable changes in precision over the same series of shots.
Because I have very little data with shot strings over 100 rds in a clean bore and don't really know what an overly fouled barrel is, I can only tell you what happens with the first 100 rds.
I've found that the first shot is almost always 10 fps to 50 fps faster than the mean velocity of the string of shots and almost always lands higher on the target. Don't forget there are always exceptions to this rule and one of them would be that if the first shot happens to be under primed or under powdered resulting in a lower velocity rd. Incredibly rare, but it can and does happen.
Now here's something really weird and I've yet to come up with an explanation of why it occurs. The second shot will be slower than the mean velocity the majority of the time.
The third shot will be within the mean velocity and the statistical uncertainties and won't be a statistical outlier (flier) in the 100 shot distribution.
The forth and subsequent shots will be the same as the third shot, but as the bore fouls you'll see a very small increase in velocity. This very small increase is in the range of only 2 or 3 fps and it's only detectable with a chronograph system like mine. It will remain totally invisible with all the commercial chronographs I'm aware of at present and that includes the commercial dopler units like the LabRadar.
Yeah, I know, a very long answer to what many might consider a simple and easy question you asked. LOL
Landy