Butch, you have me mixed up with someone else!!! I don't even buy BR barrels.
I don't believe I have ever made a comment about Tony Boyer. If I have, please direct me there and I would be glad to comment. I always thought that Tony used Shilen barrels. I have made a comment about the ONE Shilen barrel that I had which I stated was their el cheapo "Lone Star." Other than that, I can't imagine what you are getting at.
As for the muzzle brakes- my comment about where you guys get the ID sizes was based on the fact that two posters gave two different oversizes. I was just wondering if there was some magic "Hatcher's Notebook" out there that specified that .020 is better than .012 or whatever number you want to use.
I designed some muzzle brakes bases on what Dana Campbell from Mountain Rifles (Gunworks?) used to put on his rifles (before he was killed in a car wreck) and what McDonnel Douglas/Boeing uses on the Apache helicopter gunship. At the time I lived right close to the Apache factory and knew several engineers that worked there. After careful scaling and consulting with with these guys as well as two guys at an Aerospace shop in Mesa, I came up with design and .006 as the MINIMUM safe oversize. I had some friends in this Aerospace shop who could make personal stuff during their down time. As these brakes had to be timed, they were out of my league in terms of machining skill required. They made them for me and used a chucking reamer to make the final cut. Most of the Boeing/Apache stuff is classified or proprietary, but verbal details were easy enough to get. They tested hundreds of brakes!!!
ALL of these brakes went on 300 WBYS and .006 oversize did indeed provide the most reduction in recoil of any we tested. Most of the brakes were originally made with 440 C stainless but it didn't take metal finishes well and we switched to 416 obtained from barrel drops from Derrek Martin.
If the rifles didn't shoot 150 grain bullets into .5 MOA, they were rebarreled. Careful inspection of the brakes showed no evidence of bullet contact. Maybe we just got lucky or maybe the Army knows what they are talking about. The muzzle brake thing was a fad for me and after I nearly deafened a guy during a deer hunt in Mexico, I no longer use them-at least on hunting rifles. I could be talked into using them on prairie dogs or 1000 Yd BR.
Sorry for all the confusion. I will try and find a photo of one of the brakes.
Dennis