Breaking in a new rifle - Advice please.

350, thanks for the Browning quote. Since they are the barrel makers I'll go with their reccomend I think.

Thanks for all the replies and I take the points about the boresnake.

As expected there is not a huge consensus especially for a button rifled factory barrel.

Thanks all for your input so far. I continue to monitor.
 
This business of breaking in a new gun is a lot of BS, I've never went to the trouble of breaking in any firearm and never had a problem with accuracy. the best thing that you can do is to get the barrel and action cryo treated. All the firearms that I used for target shooitng were cryo treated and they worked just fine. I also treated a couple of hunting rifles that I used for moose.
joe
 
Just shoot it. The best barrel makers do not recommend any special regimen of cleaning/shooting.

According to you Lilja and Kreiger are not in the realm of best barrel makers? They both state the why's and how to's on their respective websites. Intelligent articles if you care to read them.
 
Yes o p, boresnakes pick up metal fouling and other particles and run them through again and again.

If one doesn't clean the bore snake.

Methinks those that say that bore snakes drag fouling, carbon, etc. across the crown are just regurgitating internet myths told by cleaning kit and patch sellers.

How they can think a few passes of a mild cleaning solvent covered soft braided nylon cord can wear a barrel in any comparison to a tight fitting metal bullet under thousands of pounds of pressure and heat is beyond me.

Keep the snake clean, pull straight and it makes for a quick and safe cleaning tool.

Nothing wrong with patches and rods mind you just don't get hooked into all the marketing hype.

Heck I have use patches made from used dryer sheets pulled through with nylon weed wacker line that had one end melted a bit to keep the patch from sliding off...works great in a pinch.
 
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Hi all

I couldn't find a more relevant forum and my rifle is a hunter so here goes.

I have a brand new Browning X-Bolt in .270 Win. Shortly I'll be in a position to start breaking it in (just waiting for my scope to arrive). I'd appreciate advice from the forum experts about how to best break in the rifle.

I've heard people talk of running a jag through it after each round initially which kind of makes sense to me in order to remove any small particles knocked off the barrel/chamber to prevent them scoring the bore but...

1. Is this necessary (for a rifle that I want to be long lived and enjoyed)?
2. If so, for how many rounds?
3. What would be your recommended protocols for the break in?

Thanks in advance all.

You'll be sighting in as well, so for the first group of 3 shots, run a patch with solvent through the bore after every shot...and adjust your scope based on the group. Do the same for the next group of 3 shots. After that, run a patch through at the end of your next group of 3 and fine tune your scope if necessary. From then on it's normal maintenance, I usually clean my rifles with solvent and then run a patch of G96 through them after a range session, and a thorough cleaning at the end of the season.
 
According to you Lilja and Kreiger are not in the realm of best barrel makers? They both state the why's and how to's on their respective websites. Intelligent articles if you care to read them.

For sure they make good barrels. Thanks for that, I may have to check it out. I did not check every top shelf barrel maker to find their break in procedure. I suspect that like Shilen, some of them give a procedure just to cut down on the calls and emails to answer. I have yet to meet someone that can quantify, or measure the difference. You may improve the performance by either hand, or fire lapping, or by de-stressing a barrel. But cleaning and shooting a certain number of shots does none of that. It will not fix a barrel that's been put on backwards, or improve one that is polished.
 
Yes but....How many actually clean their bore snakes? I would bet most people who buy bore snakes do so because they want the easy way out of cleaning a rifle. Having said that, i would doubt these same people want to clean the bore snake any more than they want to clean the rifle. I would also doubt you can completely wash a bore snake.
 
If the rifle in question wears a mass produced factory barrel, I wouldn't bother following any break-in regimen, if its an expensive custom barrel, its best to follow the manufacturers recommendation. The break-in procedure seems to be directed more towards the chamber than the bore, specifically, the lead, and this is where the hairs left from the cutter and hone spinning across the grain of the steel have an impact first on barrel fouling, and secondly on accuracy. Krieger's explanation of the procedure and its benefits sounds right to me.

Now one of the frequently encountered arguments opposing the break-in regimen is that its a devise created by barrel makers to wear out barrels more quickly so more could be sold. Quality barrel makers don't seem to need greater demand for their products, but if we assumed that was true, just how careful cleaning with a quality one piece cleaning rod attached to a brass jag stabbed into cotton patches soaked in solvent, and passed through a bore guide in the receiver of your rifle, between shots for the first few rounds, then after each group for a few more, for a total of about 20 rounds, could be detrimental to the life of the barrel confounds me. Yet there are those who seem to believe this, as much as others believe in the benefits of a barrel break-in.

There is however legitimate debate over the potential benefits of a barrel break-in, particularly on barrels for big game hunting rifles. MOA accuracy is pretty much now the standard for the big game rifles, a MOA big game rifle has almost no practical advantage over a 2 MOA big game rifle, and there is certainly an argument to be made that one does not need to follow a day long break-in procedure to achieve what will amount to less than a quarter minute improvement on those barrels. The flip side of the argument is that fouling is reduced when the barrel has been broken-in, making cleaning quicker and easier. Does any of that matter? That depends on your expectations and on your point of view.
 
I clean a new barrel down to bare metal after the first few range sessions. After that its lucky if it gets cleaned at all. Rough factory barrels tend to shoot better with the copper left in them, and smooth barrels don't pick up enough to matter.
 
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