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Nice to see you fixed the problem. Which powder are you using with the original setup? If you are at the lower end of your node with your loading and the powder does not deal with temperature variance well you could well be dropping enough pressure to bottom out of the node.... Velocities were 10 FPS slower than they used to be, but then again it was 30 deg cooler....
Although the issue appears to be intrinsic to the barrel itself, I personally wouldn't say it has been resolved. Although I felt it was highly unlikely that primer seating depth had anything to do with an issue of the magnitude described, I didn't respond with something likely to be viewed as opinion and potentially unhelpful. However, Mike has now indicated that the barrel itself seems to be the problem, although he has not elaborated on what is specifically wrong with it. So I am now very curious as to why a .30 cal barrel from a reputable manufacturer would go south with such a low round count.
For that reason, I'll ask Mike a few questions along those lines. Have you looked at the barrel with a borescope? Have you discussed the possibility of sending it back to be inspected with the manufacturer? Have you done anything to the barrel other than switch it to different rifle to support the notion that the barrel was the problem; i.e. something such as run an abrasive cleaner like KG-2 or JB through it?
Although it certainly can happen, I suspect the frequency at which a .30 cal barrel from a quality manufacturer goes bad at 700 rounds or so is relatively rare. As such, knowing exactly what caused it to go bad might be useful for other members of the forum. Even something as unlikely as a sizable chip out of one of the lands or damage to the crown ought to be identifiable via a borescope, or even possibly with the naked eye. Mike - if you eventually find out why the barrel was bad, would you mind sharing the info? Thanks.
Hey Guys,
Very long story here, but I have an FTR rifle that went from the most accurate barrel I'd ever shot, to dropping 8s pretty routinely, and then right back to hammering; no rhyme or reason to it.
Same lot of everything used, everything sorted, 700 rounds on the barrel, barrel looks great on a borescope, the whole 9-yards. I've spent the last ~week maniacally going through everything in my process, components, and gun to try and sort this whole mess out. About the only thing left is primer seating.
The only "change" that took place during this timeframe was I started using a primal rights primer seater. Because of the mechanical leverage, you don't get as good a feel as you might on a handheld unit (especially as the primer starts to bottom out).
When changing to this primer seater, I've been seating the primers visibly deeper, but it's difficult to get a good depth reading just using calipers as a measure. The primers aren't deformed, and nothing looked out of the ordinary so I had just assumed you wouldn't be able to shoot the difference.
I'm not going to be able to test primer depth as it relates to accuracy until next weekend, but I'm curious if anyone has seen a load turn to complete s*** as a result of primer seating depth?
I searched and saw some of the big name SR BR guys who post here saying they've seen it, but 'going to shit' is a little relative...that might mean a .3" group for them. We're talking going from 197s-cleans at 1k to shooting mid-low 180s in 3-5 mph wind here. I'm mediocre on a good day, so I can accept some responsibility for poor shooting, but without question I got a gun problem here, and I'm running out of things to look at before just pulling the barrel.
I’m just a dumb old man but I would suspect ignition as well
Wouldn't show up on two different actions either.The action (Panda F-Class) is running .225 of pinfall. I just received a new +.030 trigger hanger and installed it. That pin drops with some authority now.
If it was an ignition issue, it wasn't showing on the chronograph.
Thanks for the write-up, Mike. I'm interested for a couple reasons. First, I've recently heard about several instances where F-TR shooters had barrels apparently "going bad" well before you'd ever expect them to in terms of round count. Second, I recently experienced a situation not unlike yours, although not nearly as severe from what it sounds like. One of my F-TR rifles started shooting much less well than it had. The scores with it were still "ok", but the X-counts were noticeably lower. When I bore-scoped it, I found a lot of hard, almost crystalline, carbon down in the grooves starting about an inch or two in front of the throat, extending 6 to 8 inches further down the barrel.
In the past, I would check a barrel with the borescope after cleaning maybe every third of fourth time I would clean it, perhaps every 300-400 rounds or so. I never saw anything that would have led me to think my cleaning procedure wasn't working. In the last couple weeks or so, I have been working on getting that carbon out of the grooves, and believe me, it hasn't come out easily. It's that super hard, almost volcanic glass-looking carbon and it really didn't want to leave its home in the bottom of the grooves. Nonetheless, I have managed to remove most of it with a combination of repeated soakings in Kroil and several strokes with a bronze brush, as well as a treatment with KG-2 bore polish, which is similar to JB Bore paste. I have not yet had the opportunity to see how the barrel shoots after removing the carbon, but I'm betting [hoping] it will return to shooting the way it did when new. I have no idea how this carbon built up like that, when I've never seen it in a barrel previously, even barrels with twice the round count that this one has on it. I'm using the same powder and primers (Varget/Fed 205s), so unless they've changed the formulations on those, I wouldn't they'd be the source since I've pretty much always used Varget and Fed 205s.
Having gone through this process, it makes me wonder whether some of the other instances I have recently heard of where people's barrels suddenly started shooting poorly, and at a round count well below where you'd expect a quality barrel to behave that way, might have also been due to such carbon build-up. It sounds as though it's unlikely in your case; from your description, the cause seems likely to be something else wrong with the barrel. Nonetheless, it makes me wonder whether some of the barrels I've recently heard about "going bad" merely needed a good cleaning and a treatment with KG-2 or JB to get the carbon out of the grooves. I believe the real key in my particular case is to modify my cleaning process such that the carbon is never allowed to build up like that. If nothing else, I've also learned that I need to bore-scope after every single cleaning, which in my case is every time I fire the rifle, just to make sure that in fact, the barrel really IS clean.
In any event, thanks for posting the detailed description and I hope you are able to determine why the barrel stopped performing.
Wonder if the CLR has anything to with it?![]()