I'll post some pictures to go along with this shortly. Question ultimately is are these barrels even worth trying to fix assuming that's even possible? Is the throat reamed separately from the chamber on Remington factory barrels?
Over the last few years I've bought 5 take off barrels. Three have been very good (1 Christensen Arms, 2 unfired factory Remington). Now, the other two very clearly have problems (both used Remington factory barrels). I borescoped them in preparation to sell them, and now can't list them in good conscience.
I bought the two problem barrels on this very message board. Both were described as "great shooting". Maybe they are, but I have a hard time believing that.
Problem Barrel 1) 6.5 Creedmoor, 24" threaded, Varmint/Sendero profile. Seller described it has having 40 rounds through it, and yeah there's little to no firecracking or erosion. However, the throating is crooked such that on one side the rifling runs clean back to the neck. 40 rounds, "shoots great", but you decided to pull it. Yeah sure.
Problem Barrel 2) 7mm STW Sendero SS Fluted. Barrel wear seems okay. Same problem. The throating is very goofy, again crooked reamer perhaps. Now the crown, I don't know if it's cleaning rod damage, perhaps an amateurish attempt to fix a crown. Maybe it's a factory Remington job? I've always read that the Senderos were semi-customshop guns, but this barrel is not very confidence inspiring.
This leads me some very obvious "well duh" conclusions as well as remembering the right questions to ask when buying things
- If something shoots great, why are you pulling the barrel off?
- Be very skeptical of takeoff barrels (duh right)?
- I would not buy a barrel without seeing a borescope of it. In this day and age, that's quite easily doable.
- Barrels that are brand new, and were pulled to get the action only may be worth considering.
I will say that the RR prefix Long Range models in 300 RUM seemed to be rather decent. Pretty sure that's what the good takeoff barrels came off of plus I bought a complete rifle that shot great.
Over the last few years I've bought 5 take off barrels. Three have been very good (1 Christensen Arms, 2 unfired factory Remington). Now, the other two very clearly have problems (both used Remington factory barrels). I borescoped them in preparation to sell them, and now can't list them in good conscience.
I bought the two problem barrels on this very message board. Both were described as "great shooting". Maybe they are, but I have a hard time believing that.
Problem Barrel 1) 6.5 Creedmoor, 24" threaded, Varmint/Sendero profile. Seller described it has having 40 rounds through it, and yeah there's little to no firecracking or erosion. However, the throating is crooked such that on one side the rifling runs clean back to the neck. 40 rounds, "shoots great", but you decided to pull it. Yeah sure.
Problem Barrel 2) 7mm STW Sendero SS Fluted. Barrel wear seems okay. Same problem. The throating is very goofy, again crooked reamer perhaps. Now the crown, I don't know if it's cleaning rod damage, perhaps an amateurish attempt to fix a crown. Maybe it's a factory Remington job? I've always read that the Senderos were semi-customshop guns, but this barrel is not very confidence inspiring.
This leads me some very obvious "well duh" conclusions as well as remembering the right questions to ask when buying things
- If something shoots great, why are you pulling the barrel off?
- Be very skeptical of takeoff barrels (duh right)?
- I would not buy a barrel without seeing a borescope of it. In this day and age, that's quite easily doable.
- Barrels that are brand new, and were pulled to get the action only may be worth considering.
I will say that the RR prefix Long Range models in 300 RUM seemed to be rather decent. Pretty sure that's what the good takeoff barrels came off of plus I bought a complete rifle that shot great.