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ray321

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l know this has come up again and again. But this is my first new rifle. It is a BLR stainless with laminate pistol grip stock in 300wsm. How would a proper break in go?? l've read lots from, no break in required to a 50 round break in. ??? l'm confused. Help please.
 
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Wha...??

Daaaagh! Now I'm also confused. First time I've been confronted by the 'break in/no break in' Q cos this is the first brand new rifle I've ever owned!
So... No Nutz are recommending the 'break in' option? Something about 'lining the new barrel with copper'...? Just a myth/hold over from the days
when Outdoor Life was the #1 gun mag?
My military training taught me to at least swab the bore as soon as practical after firing the weapon, but now I see folks saying to only clean occasionally and to rarely use the bore brush. Have times and equipment changed that much since the '60s, or have shooters just gotten lazy? :)0 |
 
my method is on a custom barrel i will follow close to the makers recomendations. factory rifles i shoot and clean at the end of the days shooting. i'm not convinced breaking in helps factory barrels at all.
 
I think the quality of barrels has changed since the 60s.

In what way?
I think a chrome moly barrel made by a top custom maker, or the best of the worlds commercial rifle makers in the 1960s, is as good as they come.
 
There is a school of thought that a rifle should be cleaned every few shots, or after every shooting session. But there are certain conditions to take into account.
Have my group sizes opened up? is the barrel less accurate than the last time I fired? Has it been a long time since I put copper cleaner in the bore? These are reasons I would clean, and I don't clean every time I shoot. UNLESS:
Have I been hunting, and there has been heavy rain, snowfall etc. Or have I dropped my gun in a puddle or something. Water causes rust. I have sometimes cleaned my rifle or shotgun (oiled) even after taking it out and not shooting it, but I was because I was afraid of rust. Long time ago I had a gun or 2 get some ugly surface rust on them when I put them away. Took them out the next weekend and was amazed at the rusty film on the guns. And I will never ever put a wet, or cold gun in soft storage case.

Ive been at the range and there was a guy with a really old rifle. it shot cartridge ammo, but he swabbed the barrel after every shot. At first I thought he was shooting BP, but it was lead reloads. I saw his targets, like a 3 inch group.. so I don't really think the cleaning was helping!
 
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