BoydAllen
Gold $$ Contributor
Fellows, with a poor, rough reaming job and a button rifling process, and for that matter hammer forging, the pattern tool marks are in both the lands and grooves. The only situation where they are removed from the sides of the lands and the bottoms of the grooves is when the rifling is cut. I once had an NOS Springfield barrel that had been cut rifled. Close examination of the tops of the lands showed reamer marks that looked like microscopic acme threads, all the way down the barrel. Many factory barrels have all sorts of defects that look as bad as they are when viewed with a 20X bore scope. That is why, many years ago, I built my first rifle with a match chamber and a lapped Hart barrel. It solved all of those problems, and was worth every penny. I see a lot of fellows that have quite a bit of money invested in factory rifles that will never perform to a consistently high standard. IMO they would be better off selling a few and putting the money into one, well built rifle. For someone who has never had an excellent rifle the difference is just amazing. All of a sudden you discover that you are a much better reloader and shooter than you would have ever imagined. The best barrels are lapped or honed after reaming, and lapped again after rifling.
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