I first dealt with Brownells in 1966. They always have strived to provide the best tools for their customers and their staff are knowledgable.This shouldn’t have problem getting shipped from Brownells
I had the Brownells crowning tools, do not get it, the bits of metal will get between the pilot and lands and scratch your rifling, it will also leave chatter marks, I would get the Manson Precision crowning tools instead, it's worth every penny, ther bore guide expands to hug the lands and doesn't turn unlike the Brownells brass one that spins and the cutters do not leave chatter marks.This shouldn’t have problem getting shipped from Brownells
I've been using the Brownells tools for around 15 years and they work just fine. Maybe the problems you had were user error?I had the Brownells crowning tools, do not get it, the bits of metal will get between the pilot and lands and scratch your rifling, it will also leave chatter marks, I would get the Manson Precision crowning tools instead, it's worth every penny, ther bore guide expands to hug the lands and doesn't turn unlike the Brownells brass one that spins and the cutters do not leave chatter marks.


You sound very knowledgeable with lots of experience. Just wondering how many rifle barrels have you crowned?I'm going to suggest that where he has that microscope focused on might be different than another spot in the bore.
A rifled bore has 3 different directional facets that need cut when doing a crown and a barrel rotating in one direction cannot be "burr free" cut with a stationary cutting tool...it just cant happen and an exit cut will always either smear or cut a burr or bump in the steel it is exiting...the cutting pressure to the steel is unavoidable and steel is pushed ahead of the cutter. Especially guntecks photo'd cutter, those straight faced cutters all exit a land cut absolutely parallel to the back face of every land it contacts.
personally I think the best way to cut the perfect crow for presision shooting would be to cut the crown angle immediately after caliber boring and then rifle "wether button or cut, it doesnt mater" after the angle is cut...this pushes the burr out the front of the bore instead of on the land side surface that every bullet fired would contact it.
Actually, I have very limited experience at cutting crowns, maybe 1/2 dozen , and at the time I did them I was way more lackadaisical at realizing the importance of what I was doing...to me it was just an operation to create a good bore guard from damage. Not giving it any thought that the actual last cut will determine if a barrel will be accurate or not. Every slug that is fired from a barrel has to leave that bore at precisely the spot that your cutter will leave a bump or burr at the end of every land ever made.You sound very knowledgeable with lots of experience. Just wondering how many rifle barrels have you crowned?
I never saw any accuracy shooter using that method.^^^^^
Any slight burr is going to disappear when the rifle is fired.
If desired, the crown can be lapped with a brass lap and compound. That is what the round headed brass screw and compound accomplish.
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Any slight burr is going to disappear when the rifle is fired.
If desired, the crown can be lapped with a brass lap and compound. That is what the round headed brass screw and compound accomplish.



























