Mike
Mike, I have actually measured the amount of runnout of different spots in a barrel. Follow me here, this is rather convoluted.
It stared when I got a new blank ready to chamber. Looking through it, I could see some shadows that I did not like, so I put the blank in the lathe, chamber end in a steady rest, and chucked the muzzle in a three jaw buck chuck. I looked through the bore as it turned, and it was really bad, at least two spots looked like those clowns in a circus riding the bicycles with the wheels running out.
I was sort of mad, thought about boxing it up and sending it back, but instead, I thought I would see just how bad it was.
First, I put the blank between centers, and the turned profile ran within .002 any where on it. So I took and scribed a straight line down the blank, and then cut it up in four inch pieces. (each piece represents about $40).
Now, I could put each one of these pieces between centers and see how much the OD ran out with the ID.
One particularilly bad spot, about 7 inches up from the chamber end, now had that spot run out .011 to .012 inch. That shows that the Gun Drill took some sort of weird turn at that spot. Other pieces would run out as much as .003 to .004, some darn near dead true.
I marked the runnout spots in their relation to the OD, laid the pieces on a table with that scribed line all back in line, and hardly any of the spots showed the same runnout in relation to that line. In fact, on other bad spot, about 10 inches up from the muzzle end, was about 90 degrees to that really bad spot up by the chamber.
So yes, I destroyed a new blank, (probably a hummer),
just to satisfy my curiosity. I sent all of the pieces back to the manufacturer with an explanation as to what I had done, just for their own knowledge. They sent me a new blank. And Thanked me.
This is another reason I think the idea of barrel indexing is a farce. Barrels are not "bent", as in a banna style bend. They have various spots in the ID that for what ever reason the Gun drill decides, tend to wander in different directions.
Since I know what darned near .012 looks like, I can now look through a bore and pretty well get a good idea to my own satisfaction as to just how "straight" the thing really is. I have a pretty good "machinist" eye for this sort of thing........jackie