Maybe it has more to do with the rifling itself than the throat in a particular barrel when it comes to rechambering to tell whether it will be more accurate than before, I dunno
Cat
Yep, that is my conclusion.
"Worse" barrel I ever set back was a used Palma barrel of Cdn manufacture. Was shot ALOT and was eventually pulled when the lands literally, fell off the bore. never seen anything like this.
Being young and willing to experiment, it got chopped a bit and another 308 match chamber installed on a Parker Hale Midland action. Well with a bit of load work up, it did shoot very well.
My goal was anything 1/2 min or so. This rifle shot 1/3min average with a few groups in the 1/4 min range. I was thrilled (barrel was essentially free and the smith that sold it to me was also curious so did the barrel work for cheap).
My estimate is 500rds and the trouble started. Groups were wild and eventually I looked into the bore. Yep, small chunks of lands were again missing. What to do? Can't set back anymore as there wasn't enough shank.
Since this was a long action, why not build a wildcat. The smith had a 30Gibbs reamer and I love improved cases so off it went. All that was done was to lengthen the chamber.
The barrel again shot great and averaged 1/3 min at 250yds with 165gr SST's. Used it hunting and it bagged a nice mulie across a cut block. Shot it somemore and sold it. have heard that the same rifle was shot some so it looked like the chambering finally reached solid rifling.
Approx 2" was chopped from the chamber side plus the deeper chambering so 4.5" to reach better rifling.
As I said in an earlier post, wear occurs in a cone and will travel some distance down the bore. When looking from the chamber side, you will still see the lands but the bore diameter has gotten bigger and the lands thinner. Looks good but the bullet is now sloshing down the pipe.
Removing all this and getting back to full lands should allow the barrel to shoot at its previous levels. However, the lands are likely less resistant to wear so this rechambering may not last as long as the orig.
Maybe someone with a metallurgy background can chime in...
As for polishing the chamber, why would you want to polish anymore then is necessary to ensure extraction? From what I hear, if a good finishing reamer is used properly, no chamber touch up should be required. Certainly the many barrels I have had chambered by quality gunsmiths didn't glow brilliantly. And all had a bit of tool marks left in.
Unless I am mistaken, polishing occurs using sandpaper in an unsupported manner. If the chamber is polished to remove every tool mark from the reamer and to a brilliant shine, wouldn't:
a) it also enlarge the chamber?
b) allow the chance to make an out of round chamber?
c) take a long time thus increasing costs or decreasing productivity?
Being off a thou or few wouldn't be hard sanding/polishing freehand. Does polishing this much create 'runout' into the chamber?
Jerry