There are a lot of barrels that aren't competitive at 15 rds let alone 1500.
This is an undeniable fact,I don't care who you are. In fifteen years of dabbling in this Sport, I can say that I have had four proven competitive barrels and one competitive rifle. I average five barrel blanks a year for two rifles. Not counting the barrels for the Rail gun that I bought last year. I'm in this game for the fun. I'm not obsessed with finding that hummer barrel. Good times and friends are more important.
The fella's who are consistently competitive at this Sport are buying and testing a lot more barrels than I do. I wonder if they're having fun.
Glenn
I average five barrel blanks a year for two rifles. Not counting the barrels for the Rail gun that I bought last year. Not counting the barrels for the Rail gun that I bought last year. I'm in this game for the fun. I'm not obsessed with finding that hummer barrel. Good times and friends are more important.
The fella's who are consistently competitive at this Sport are buying and testing a lot more barrels than I do. I wonder if they're having fun.
Glenn, five plus barrels a year sounds like a lot to me. At the snail pace I'm going with barrels I must be having a LOT of fun.
Several years back,I had a excellent shooting barrel, set back and recrowned at about 1000 rounds.(6PPC)
Three guns and Five barrels a year(Average)........ Do the math. I would buy five barrels a year for each gun, if I could do my own chamber work. You pay for what you don't know in this Sport.
How many barrels a year do you buy?
Let's say you shoot a barrel 1,000 rounds before you change. The math tells me that you're shooting about 5,000 rounds a year and spending about $2,500/yr on barrels and $1,500/yr on components. I think you're having more fun than me.
As for your question, I think I'll claim the 5th.
how much better bbl's become when everything else is right.
Richard Brensing
Hunter..Have some fun. Buy more barrels.
how much better bbl's become when everything else is right.
Richard Brensing
That's a catchy quote; however, my problem is that I see a bunch of variables that conspire to ruin my groups and I'm reluctant to frequently throw $500 at one of those variables hoping that it's the culprit.
Hunter..Barrels are an expendable component of the Rifle. Screw the old off. Screw the new one on. A new barrel may fix a problem you thought you had. The best rifle on the planet won't make a mediocre barrel shoot better.
Of course, the same can be said about the best barrel that finds it way on a mediocre Rifle. I once owned a Rifle that made me think I knew how to shoot benchrest. Wore the barrel out and reality struck. I've been searching for that elusive hummer barrel ever since. I've come close but never quite duplicated the performance of that one barrel. I no longer own that special Rifle,but my barrel search continues. I might get lucky. Its a lot cheaper than buying new Rifles.
Glenn
is a big part of the equation. But it is sure not everything. I worked really hard with 4 different rifles this year. I got every one of them to shoot teen aggs in registered matches. Do you think I got lucky with that many bbl.'s? And that was with 5 different lots of jackets. It's easy to get fixated on just one part of the system, when many things have to work together to have a truly competitive rifle.
Richard Brensing
If you ever get a really, really, really great barrel, you will know it.
I have had a few. The only one in the past years is that first 1-18 twist 30 cal Krieger. That is the only 25X barrel I have owned, and it still owns the smallest 5-5 shot group aggregate ever shot by a 30 caliber Rifle anywhere in Registered Competition.
It's down to a tad over 19 inches now on it's 3d set-back.
That originol barrel will be saved as it is just in case Lake Charles gets the NBRSA VFS Nationals this year.
Then you had better get it screwed on in late MAY because the SCORE Nationals includes VFS, SIR. All of the pointblank score disciplines will be contested.