Not wanting to highjack the tread below about how to straighten out a chamber, I thought I'd start a new tread ;
One minute of angle is 1" roughly, at 100 yards, there are 60 minutes to 1 degree --- so if the bore is pointed only 1 degree off of true center the impact would move 60" or 5 feet at 100 yards.--- I have never seen a barrel even remotely close to being this crooked!!!
After cutting off the big end of a barrel blank to whatever length I will need, I chamber by indicating in at two places (the throat and the base of the case), at the breach end of the barrel, letting the muzzle swing to where ever it wants.
I can not think of a single barrel that was as much as 10" off of POI when installed -- most are only 1-2 inches off of wherever the old barrel was pointing --- I use Bartlein barrels exclusively -- and they are generally pretty straight --- I have had extremely straight barrels shoot extremely well --- like hall of fame good!!! --- give me a straight barrel every time!!! -- Crooked barrels will also shoot, but I find that the percentage of crooked barrels that shoot well is less than for straight barrels --
lets consider what crooked really means ??? a barrel that has .020 runout or more over it's entire length is a very crooked barrel in my opinion.-- Straight barrels will runout about .005 or less over their entire length -- this is the amount of muzzle swing I get when the barrel is indicated in at two places at the chamber end. The bore may wander some inside the blank, but I have no way to measure this except to look thru the barrel while it's running in the lathe --- and for the most part Bartlein barrels appear to be very straight!!
I do not believe that as much as 20- 30 MOA will make a rats ass difference in how a rifle recoils or how much a barrel whips. I also do not believe that any barrel will whip as much as 1/4 inch as somebody in the previous post indicated ---if it did it would be permanently bent --- they do move that much --- but it's because the entire rifle is moving -- not barrel whip ---
I find that people can make themselves believe whatever they think they want to see. Over the years I've done a lot of experimenting with clocking of barrels and pointing barrels by bedding actions at slight angles into stocks. In MY opinion clocking a barrel to correct for barrel internal runout is a colossal waste of time -- barrels are simply not crooked enough to make it matter at all if a barrel is pointing 10 MOA( that's a lot) up, sideways, or down -- t's simply not enough angle to make any difference --How a gun recoils, rides the bags, tracks and shoots depends entirely on the stock design, and how the action is bedded into that stock. but now were talking in degrees not a few minutes of a degree!! after you have an angle built into your action/stock bedding, any internal barrel bore wanderings will make no difference in how the rifle recoils or shoots.
I bed my rifles so that the barrel points up slightly and any amount of internal crookedness in a barrel will not be enough to eliminate the amount of up that I bed into my rifles. OH and BTW Scoville and Scarborough also bed so that the barrel points slightly up.
That's all I've got for now
later
Gene Bukys
One minute of angle is 1" roughly, at 100 yards, there are 60 minutes to 1 degree --- so if the bore is pointed only 1 degree off of true center the impact would move 60" or 5 feet at 100 yards.--- I have never seen a barrel even remotely close to being this crooked!!!
After cutting off the big end of a barrel blank to whatever length I will need, I chamber by indicating in at two places (the throat and the base of the case), at the breach end of the barrel, letting the muzzle swing to where ever it wants.
I can not think of a single barrel that was as much as 10" off of POI when installed -- most are only 1-2 inches off of wherever the old barrel was pointing --- I use Bartlein barrels exclusively -- and they are generally pretty straight --- I have had extremely straight barrels shoot extremely well --- like hall of fame good!!! --- give me a straight barrel every time!!! -- Crooked barrels will also shoot, but I find that the percentage of crooked barrels that shoot well is less than for straight barrels --
lets consider what crooked really means ??? a barrel that has .020 runout or more over it's entire length is a very crooked barrel in my opinion.-- Straight barrels will runout about .005 or less over their entire length -- this is the amount of muzzle swing I get when the barrel is indicated in at two places at the chamber end. The bore may wander some inside the blank, but I have no way to measure this except to look thru the barrel while it's running in the lathe --- and for the most part Bartlein barrels appear to be very straight!!
I do not believe that as much as 20- 30 MOA will make a rats ass difference in how a rifle recoils or how much a barrel whips. I also do not believe that any barrel will whip as much as 1/4 inch as somebody in the previous post indicated ---if it did it would be permanently bent --- they do move that much --- but it's because the entire rifle is moving -- not barrel whip ---
I find that people can make themselves believe whatever they think they want to see. Over the years I've done a lot of experimenting with clocking of barrels and pointing barrels by bedding actions at slight angles into stocks. In MY opinion clocking a barrel to correct for barrel internal runout is a colossal waste of time -- barrels are simply not crooked enough to make it matter at all if a barrel is pointing 10 MOA( that's a lot) up, sideways, or down -- t's simply not enough angle to make any difference --How a gun recoils, rides the bags, tracks and shoots depends entirely on the stock design, and how the action is bedded into that stock. but now were talking in degrees not a few minutes of a degree!! after you have an angle built into your action/stock bedding, any internal barrel bore wanderings will make no difference in how the rifle recoils or shoots.
I bed my rifles so that the barrel points up slightly and any amount of internal crookedness in a barrel will not be enough to eliminate the amount of up that I bed into my rifles. OH and BTW Scoville and Scarborough also bed so that the barrel points slightly up.
That's all I've got for now
later
Gene Bukys