You need a setup like this:
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It's in the Savage factory.
Straightening
Home > Modern Firearms Manufacture > Rifled Barrels > Straightening
After reaming and/or lapping, barrels may be straightened. An operator aims the barrel at an optical pattern on a nearby wall. The pattern design is such that its reflection on the interior surface of the barrel reveals the straightness of the bore, relative to the long axis. If the reflection indicates that the bored hole is not concentric to the axis, the operator places the barrel in a large hand press and applies pressure to points on the barrel that will improve straightness.
Click here to watch a video from Savage Arms of a gun barrel being straightened
Barrel straightening is a manual operation that requires a very skilled operator, adding to the cost of the barrel-making operation. It behooves the designers and operators of barrel-making equipment to create and maintain machines that produce straight barrels every time.
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/training/firearms-training/module04/fir_m04_t06_04.htm
If the barrel was damaged and has been bent, get rid of it. You can bend it back, but it will forever have stresses in it that will change with temperature.
Many barrels come from the factory with lots of run-out (warping) including some custom barrels. It does not mean they will not shoot.
Not trying to be ignorant here, far from it, but your two statements contradict each other.
Having said that, back when I went to B.C.I.T. for motorcycle mechanics, we had to take a bent fork tube and straighten it. We accomplished this using a hydraulic press, V-blocks, and a dial indicator. There was NO mention of residual stress that could compromise the tubes. While these were not subjected to any kind of heat cycling they were deemed fit to go back into use. I may be wrong but, if I can straighten a fork tube so it has no run-out, it seems to me that it can be done with a barrel as well. Realistically, how many rounds would need to be fired from a barrel in normal use to have ANY residual stresses affect accuracy? And as for heat build up, same thing; we're not firing a machine gun here.
I look forward to more discussion on this topic.
Not trying to be ignorant here, far from it, but your two statements contradict each other.
Having said that, back when I went to B.C.I.T. for motorcycle mechanics, we had to take a bent fork tube and straighten it. We accomplished this using a hydraulic press, V-blocks, and a dial indicator. There was NO mention of residual stress that could compromise the tubes. While these were not subjected to any kind of heat cycling they were deemed fit to go back into use. I may be wrong but, if I can straighten a fork tube so it has no run-out, it seems to me that it can be done with a barrel as well. Realistically, how many rounds would need to be fired from a barrel in normal use to have ANY residual stresses affect accuracy? And as for heat build up, same thing; we're not firing a machine gun here.
I look forward to more discussion on this topic.
How bent, is bent?
I have a #4 Lee Enfield that needs the front sight tapped out a quarter inch to the right.
Shoots fine, but looks weird.
I'm considering scoping it, so I can forget about that sight. It's a sporter anyway.
Straighten a barrel, sure, most gunsmiths can accomplish this, or know where to get it done. But like said above, it will have stress built in as a result. You can have that stress removed, with a heat treatment, but a new barrel is likely cheaper.
My uncle once claimed he missed a deer because of a bent barrel.
My grandfather then took his rifle, and proceeded to shoot the center out of the target with it.




























