I recently acquired a FireDragon barrel chambered in .357Sig for my Sig P229. Took it out to the range and fed it some handloaded Hornady 147gr. RNBT. To my great surprise, I had next to no accuracy, so I brought the target in a bit closer. That's when I noticed the dreaded "keyholes" in my target.
Now, I've already tried this recipe in a factory .357Sig barrel in my P226 with great success, so I know it's not a load problem. Also, I fired some factory 124gr. BEB out of the FireDragon barrel and the bullets stabilized.
Upon visual inspection of the FireDragon barrel, I was immediately struck by the rifling, which doesn't look "cut" like in my other barrels. The rifling's smoother, subtler. It says on the document that came with it that the "barrels are bored and rifled using ECM (electro-chemical machining)", with a 1:16 right-hand twist.
So, anyone have any idea why 147gr. bullets couldn't stabilize in that barrel?
Now, I've already tried this recipe in a factory .357Sig barrel in my P226 with great success, so I know it's not a load problem. Also, I fired some factory 124gr. BEB out of the FireDragon barrel and the bullets stabilized.
Upon visual inspection of the FireDragon barrel, I was immediately struck by the rifling, which doesn't look "cut" like in my other barrels. The rifling's smoother, subtler. It says on the document that came with it that the "barrels are bored and rifled using ECM (electro-chemical machining)", with a 1:16 right-hand twist.
So, anyone have any idea why 147gr. bullets couldn't stabilize in that barrel?