I bought a Butler Creek .920 ultralight 10/22 barrel . It isn't carbon fiber , it's plastic with a steel barrel liner . New , never fired and i bought it in the package off a guy for 50 bucks . Installed it and of 9 brands of ammo , 2 feed . Took the barrel off and tried to drop rounds in . Same thing . Most brands go 2/3rd's way in and then have to be forced in with thumb pressure and then picked out with a knife blade .
I'm not going to spend any money on a 50 dollar barrel taking it to a gunsmith and having him run a reamer in . Here's the thought . I get .20 cal , or about there dowling from Canadian Tire , wrap one end in 1 inch wide 600 grit sandpaper then go to 1000 grit to finish it off and turn the dowel by hand , eyeballing it to keep it straight . Keep checking with ammo as i'm using 600 grit and when the rounds will chamber , do a final polish with 1000 grit . I can get the dowling for 3 bucks and i already have the sandpaper .
Anybody have a better idea as 3 bucks is all i'm willing to spend on a cheap plastic junk barrel although it's new . By going very slow i think i can keep the wood dowling very straight as i turn it between my thumb and index finger . The only ammo that chambers is Eley and i'll never waste expensive ammo in a cheap barrel .
Although new in the package i wouldn't pay postage to send it back to Butler Creek so that isn't an option .
I'm going to do it myself but looking to see if there is a better suggestion on how to do it .
I'm not going to spend any money on a 50 dollar barrel taking it to a gunsmith and having him run a reamer in . Here's the thought . I get .20 cal , or about there dowling from Canadian Tire , wrap one end in 1 inch wide 600 grit sandpaper then go to 1000 grit to finish it off and turn the dowel by hand , eyeballing it to keep it straight . Keep checking with ammo as i'm using 600 grit and when the rounds will chamber , do a final polish with 1000 grit . I can get the dowling for 3 bucks and i already have the sandpaper .
Anybody have a better idea as 3 bucks is all i'm willing to spend on a cheap plastic junk barrel although it's new . By going very slow i think i can keep the wood dowling very straight as i turn it between my thumb and index finger . The only ammo that chambers is Eley and i'll never waste expensive ammo in a cheap barrel .
Although new in the package i wouldn't pay postage to send it back to Butler Creek so that isn't an option .
I'm going to do it myself but looking to see if there is a better suggestion on how to do it .