To get a rifle to shoot extremely well, the barrel work is most likely the most important part. To get a prethreaded, short chambered barrel is fine for hobbists, or amateur gun builders who may not have the equipment to contour, thread and chamber a barrel. Matchgrade accuracy here is unlikely. To get the most out of the parts, I find it is better to match the barrel threads with EXACTLY what is cut in the action, many times to get the threads centered with the bore of the action it is necessary to recut them, thereby making the prethreaded barrel useless.
Short cut chambers, I feel, are not the answer either, this means a guy has to buy a reamer anyway , then hope he gets it straight in the precut chamber to get the headspace right. Reamers do have slight tolerance variations as well and my thinking is that its best to "finish" the chamber with the use of 1 reamer only, unless specified throat reaming is required. My opinion is that a long chambered barrel makes more sense, as then all you have to do is to keep setting the barrel back till the headspace is correct.
I do not use ANY prethreaded or prechambered barrels, preferring to do my own contouring, threading and chambering.
I assume the smithing cost to turn, thread, chamber and cut/crown a barrel is more than the cost to buy one already done)
Yes as each barrel is done manually 1 at a time, in most shops, as opposed to running a few thousand of each caliber at a time assembly line style.
I was told last year while at the SHOT Show by a rather arrogant rep of Lothar Walther, that they produce prethreaded, contoured, chambered barrels, that are better than any small gunsmith shop can do and all you have to do is screw the barrel onto the action and voila, done. Instant tack driver. YA Right, I knew I was breathing very same air as a moron.
I believe that cutting the chamber is critical, right?
Absolutely!! It is pretty easy to screw up and then the fun begins, chatter marks, not centered chambers, rough chambers all easy to do, harder to fix.
Stainless has less tensile? I am not sure on that count, but it is softer or not as brittle, in some respects, than chrome moly I am sure that there must be a metalurgist on the forum who will hop in here. There has been a steady trend over the last several years towards more stainless than chrome moly rebarrel jobs in my shop, and I am seeing far more stainless rifles made by the big makers, in my experience a stainless barrel has 2 benefits, I find they last longer, and they do not need the added cost of being blued for rust protection, to be used.
Many high ranking competetive shooters have switched over to stainless steel barrels, typically they do this for a reason.
If the end result is accuracy , I believe that a good smith will deliver a superior product, than the pre machined barrels can, greater initial cost, certainly, but you usually get what you pay for, and if there are problems , you don't have the hassle of sorting it out, as any reputable shop will ensure satisfaction :mrgreen: