sks- how many rounds before barrel is shot out

You can wear out a .270 Winchester in about 5000 rounds. Its accurate life is around the 3000 mark. Life can be exceeded or lowered depending on the quality of ammo and how lightly or heavily the case its loaded.

The Canadian Rangers replace barrels on their Lee Enfields every 10,000 rounds.

A .22LR basically can't wear out and only wear out from excessive cleaning or not cleaning enough.

A magnum cartridge, such as a 7mm Remington Magnum, can wear a barrel out in as little as 1000 rounds. Its accurate life ends about at that point and may only have acceptable hunting accuracy up to 1500 rounds.

.308 barrels are suppose to last a very long time. Its barrel life is suppose to be as high as 10,000 rounds even in a commercial bolt action rifle.

A 9mm pistol can last about 25,000 - 40,000 rounds.

A .223 accurate life is suppose to be just shy of 10,000 rounds.

In the Czech Military, the Vz 58 7.62x39 service life was set at 15,000 rounds.

Note that barrel life and accurate life are two different things. Accurate life span is how long will the firearm retain it's original new broken in barrel accuracy. Barrel life is how long a barrel will last until its accuracy is considered unacceptable.

They're are a number of variables such as type of bullet, case load, and primer.

Semi / Full auto rifles suffer from gas port erosion. Even though a barrel may still be fine, the gas port may erode to cause violent ejection and increased wear to the rest of the firearm and therefore the barrel can be considered worn out.
 
How long should the VZ58 piston and spring last if cleaned properly, and how long can they last if not cleaned properly?

It should last as long as the rifle is in service (rifle expected service life is 15,000-20,000). The piston, bolt, locking block are chromed and springs are blued. Keep everything clean and lubed and everything should be good. Make an effort to scrub clean the corrosive residue around the gas port, piston and hole that retains the spring area.

I have personally ran one up to 6000 rounds now, other than the usual wear on the rails, everything is still good as new.
 
Well it's not so much the number of rounds that due it but how fast you shoot the ammo with heat the metal can soften and then wear more or it can even melt and cause a bore obstruction then explode. Just look into machine gun exploding barrels they had more then 1 barrel on the battle field for a reason when it gets to hot they dump it then put a new one on they even pee on the guns to cool them down because if it gets to hot you hot big problems. Now unless you have large magazines ie 10 rounds with stripper clips it's very hard to heat the firearm up to that point and unless it's full auto as well you get the point it would be hard for a person to take the firearm to that point. The reason rounds are soft and not steel jacketed is to prevent wear when you have steel on steel contact you get high wear use a softer and harder metal like copper and steel or lead and steel and you will almost never wear out the steel barrel unless you damage it with heat. All it takes is for the barrel to widen out a little for it to shoot less accurately. If the barrel is .352 of an inch then it becomes .354 and the round is .352 then you get bad accuracy but it will still shoot. The springs will wear out before a barrel anyways and at that point you might as well get another firearm.

Can you do this with an sks you need a long belt and 1500 rounds just to make it glow like this one good luck.
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Well I have not set an Sks on fire yet...... Yet...... Lol then again I never tried lol. Can't help but think that m 60 should have been the final scene in breaking bad... Make it last a couple minutes longer lol great show it was..... Thanks for posting
 
50,000 + rounds...easily as long as you not shooting 100s at a time as fast as possible.

Remember shooting "out" a barrel is mostly effect by very fast, high pressure rounds and rapid firing them and not letting it cool. Guns in calibers like the the .22-250 and .243 are effected bty this. It also starts slow, turning a MOA gun to a 2MOA gun, then a 3MOA gun and so on. Fort most applications (medium-big game hunting, combat) a 3MOA gun is more then enough, especially at SKS/7.62x39 ranges.

An SKS with surplus is approx. a3MOA gun to begin with anyways :p
 
I don't think that someone will typically shoot out a chrome lined sks barrel. The 7.62x39 is a very efficient cartridge that is not very high velocity. Plus, with only neutered five round capacity, the barrel only gets so hot. The steel is rock hard. That barrel should outlast your desire to shoot and clean it.
 
You're supposed to clean an SKS?

What ! You don't shoot corrosive...... How many rounds of corrosive with out cleaning will an Sks wear out? Lol wow more people have responded then the first four months of starting this lol and now I know! Sweet
 
sks- how many rounds before barrel is shot out

I have several SKS shooters, one of them consumer made from the eighties, that I've been shooting since the eighties. I'm sure its got 6 or 8000 rounds through it. I got 4 inch groups back them, and I still get about 4 inch groups now.
 
What ! You don't shoot corrosive...... How many rounds of corrosive with out cleaning will an Sks wear out? Lol wow more people have responded then the first four months of starting this lol and now I know! Sweet

I bought a Chinese SKS 15 years ago, think I paid $200 for the rifle and 1280 rounds.

Over 2 years it saw about 400 rounds of corrosive and 10 soft tip hunting rounds on deer and bear. Then it sat without cleaning.

I took it out last year and it was covered in brown fuzz, up to the range it went. It could still shoot popcan MOA at 100meters.

After shooting I hose it down with Breakclean then G96......so you could say I've intentially cleaned this SKS once in 15 years. :D
 
What ! You don't shoot corrosive...... How many rounds of corrosive with out cleaning will an Sks wear out? Lol wow more people have responded then the first four months of starting this lol and now I know! Sweet

If you clean it, it won't be any different than non-corrosive ammo. It doesn't take a long time to clean it well and corrosive surplus is an excellent cheap plinking option. No need to be afraid of it - these rifles were designed to shoot some of the crummiest, most corrosive ammo you can imagine.

With that said, I at one point slacked off and didn't clean two of my SKS' after taking them to the range as a lot of stuff came up. One was a Chinese Type 56, the other is a Yugoslavian M59/66 with an non-chrome lined bore. The Chinese model was no worse for wear, but the Yugo had some light pitting in the bore. After cleaning them up, I took them both out and printed them on paper: no accuracy change with either.

Don't take that as an excuse to not clean, though.
 
I'm "laughing out loud" (pun) when people are saying "I shot nnnnn rounds and the accuracy is still the same" without actually stating what the accuracy is (or rather isn't).
Popcan MOA is 2MOA tops which I doubt any SKS can do consistently.
Prove me wrong.
 
i have 8-9000 rounds all corrosive through my issued chinese sks and it still shoots fine, and probably 3-4000 through my russians combined and their fine.
 
What people fail to consider the greatest contribution to burning out a barrel is bullet velocity. A gun that shoots at 3400 fps can burn out in 2000 or 3000 rounds. Rifles with bullets such as 7.62x39 or 30-30 that travel 2400 fps can sling 3 or 4 times the amount of ammo before having the same effect.

Its the first 6 or 8 inches of the barrel that begins to burn out. When you slug your barrel from the muzzle, the last few inches will become easy and loose. Or you can slug a ball from the opposite way and measure the difference.
 
And to the fact that many of the Chinese SKS's out shoot the Russian guns...............factory 26 blade bayonet model
 
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