RockyMtnMT
Official LRH Sponsor
This subject gets beat up a lot. I'm not asking opinions on whether or not to break in. I want to know how you all determine when a barrel is successfully broken in. Round count or fouling or something else?
Are you cleaning constantly during this process?When the barrel stops speeding up and velocity plateaus is when I consider a barrel broke in. That may take 50 shots or 150 shots.
No more than usual. If the barrel stops shooting or if the fouling looks visibly excessive, I'll clean it. Then continue to shoot until it needs cleaned. I don't clean excessively. Once it's broke in I'll clean every 100-150 shots or clean if the gun gets rained on or really dirty hunting.Are you cleaning constantly during this process?
No more than usual. If the barrel stops shooting or if the fouling looks visibly excessive, I'll clean it. Then continue to shoot until it needs cleaned. I don't clean excessively. Once it's broke in I'll clean every 100-150 shots or clean if the gun gets rained on or really dirty hunting.
We have been cleaning before shooting then shooting a few and cleaning to see if there is any copper fouling. If fouling is present then staying with several shots then clean until fouling ends.
With our bullets we rarely see copper fouling so we have pretty much abandoned any formal procedure. I will try and monitor vel farther in the load count to see if I can see any further gain in vel. Seems to be a consensus that the barrel will continue to gain speed until finished.
I have always felt like I am cleaning life out of a barrel when following a full break in procedure. Particularly if there us no copper fouling present.
I tend to think the opposite...Like not cleaning I am reducing life of the barrel... I just can't let myself let a barrel have more than 100 rounds through it before cleaning.
Cleaning regimens are unique to the individual, as is load development.Once my barrels are broken in and speed levels out I normally clean every 100 rounds unless accuracy falls off or its going to sit a while. If I'm putting the rifle away for several moths I always run a little coated oil patch down the bore.