• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

Rechambering and or setting barrels back...

Here are some considerations to think about re-chambering or setting back already chambered barrels.

1. Factory barrels generally are not very high quality in comparison to custom aftermarket barrels.
2. With factory sporter barrels the cylinder sections are minimal in length and gives little chamber support when shortened.
3. When most factory barrels were set up for chambering they rarely are dialed in like a gunsmith would do it. They are done in mass production and the tooling is subject to have more wear in vital areas. Often the chambers are not as precise as those done one off. The throats are long to accommodate many bullet lengths.
4. The number of rounds fired in a barrel has a cumulative effect on barrels. The throat and first 8 inches of a barrel take a majority of the heat and pressure. The last 4-5 inches of the barrel take the friction of the bullet passing over it with the maximum pressure. When examining a used barrel clean it well and hold it up to the light. New barrels will have a marks on top of the lands. Shot barrels the tops of the lands will look flattened.
5. High quality barrels are lapped to both take out tool marks and to put choke into the barrel. Set back barrels are often shortened. Shortening a barrel may remove some or all of the choke.
6. To re-chamber or set a barrel back it often takes the person doing the work more time than doing an original chambering. It requires removing some or all of the previous chamber. It is more difficult to dial in due to wear in the new throat area.
6. If you are starting off with an inferior barrel don't expect it to be any better the second time around.

In years past benchrest shooters often set barrels back every 500-600 rounds. Many of them did their own work so the expense was not a factor.

I prefer not to rechamber or set back barrels because I feel in most cases it is not cost effective.

There are exceptions to this but. The aforementioned factors generally apply.

Nat Lambeth
 
The first barrel I ever did was a set back. Dialing it in was nightmare just as nat said. the ware on lands and groves was all over the place. For a first attempt it made it kind of irritating to try and make it right. After that I just got a new barrel and the dialing it in was a breeze compared to the shot out one.
 
If my customer asks to reuse a factory barrel, set back.....I give them the "dumb look". Then they get the idea that it is a waste of time and money.
 
I set my ppc barrel back every 5-700 rounds. I find it extremely easy to do. I will agree that the results will vary. Sometimes they come back to life and give me a little better groups, but sometimes it doesn't. I like to keep my crowns sharp as well. Every 2-300 rounds I hit the crowns. I do all my own work, so money isn't an issue. Lee
 
I have a 6/284 with under 400 rounds through it . Original gunsmith I guess didn't run the reamer in all the way and I had extraction problems when approaching moderate loads.So I'm having a new gunsmith run his reamer in it. Asked him about setting it back he said maybe a thread or 2 he'll investigate amount. Will this be a challenging task for him ? This is a Brux bbl
 
Ironworker said:
I have a 6/284 with under 400 rounds through it . Original gunsmith I guess didn't run the reamer in all the way and I had extraction problems when approaching moderate loads.So I'm having a new gunsmith run his reamer in it. Asked him about setting it back he said maybe a thread or 2 he'll investigate amount. Will this be a challenging task for him ? This is a Brux bbl

After 25 years in and out of this business, one thing hasn't changed. There are plenty of gunsmiths that like to critique other gunsmith's work. Not running the reamer in all of the way doesn't really hold water when it comes to extraction problems. Be careful. It would be worth your while to buy a go gauge. Just my opinion of course.

edit: Just read your other post about the gun not closing on a go Gauge. Disregard original post. :)
 
Before I set back a chamber that closes on a Go Gauge. I would check the clearance in the web, diameter of the neck area, and the guns primary extraction.
Nat Lambeth
 
I'm confused on which gauge he first used,first one it didn't close. He said gun smith didn't run the reamer in all the way. He felt and pointed out to me a pressure ring right at where the case bottles down to the neck right at the bevel ( Not at the neck) . He said his reamer is for Lupua Brass and 5/1000 thicker at the neck and no more need for neck turning. ( Sick of neck turning)
 
All My Go and NO GO Gauges are engraved to identify them as to what they are. I they are SAMMI gauges for rimless bottle neck cases the NO Go gauge should be .0035" longer from the datum line on the shoulder to the case head. The bolt should close on the Go gauge and not close on the No Go gauge (as their names imply) The order you use them is irrelevant just know which one you are using. Go and No Go gauges don't gauge the neck diameter or the case diameter they only measure headspace. I use pin gauges to measure neck diameter. I use case gauges to measure cases. One can measure the neck, shoulder, web, and head diameter with a set of mics.
Throat, and free bore can be measured with a Hornady bullet seating depth gauge or Sinclair bullet seating depth gauge.
Nat Lambeth
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
165,791
Messages
2,203,452
Members
79,110
Latest member
miles813
Back
Top