This is one of those topics that will no doubt generate a fair bit of discussion among both sides of the equation as in buyer and seller.Even using established guidelines there will always be a lot of subjectivity involved as to what exactly fits which description.Personally,I'm pretty much in line with your take on the subject.I would rate a moderately pitted bore as good if the rifling is good all the way through. Thus far only one person has accused me of having poor vision and overrating a bore.
You can be as anal as you want, but you still cannot subject old milsurps to the NRA type grading.
Use the antique section or ask for pics and any other questions.
My personal pet peeve as a SELLER is when a buyer asks me questions already in the ad or is unrealistically picky. On more than one occasion, the questions got stupid enough that I told he buyer to go buy elsewhere. I don't need the headache of a buyer who will never be please no matter what they receive.
And example. I listed a BRAND NEW, still in the wax paper, barrel for sale in the EE (it was for an M48 Mauser). One guy wanted be to degrease it, get "excellent macro pictures of the bore" and e-mail them to him, asked me if I had a plug gauge for 8mm Mauser (I don't) and threatened he's return it if he found a single pit. I told the guy to pound sand and added him to my ignore list. If I say it's new, it's new. For $75, I'm not taking any extra pictures. Take it or leave it.
My margins on the guns and parts I sell are small. Very small. No, I'm not going to sell new-in-wrap Wolffe spring kits for less than half what Wolffe sells them for, so don;t ask. No, I'm not going to buy a plug gauge and a $300 macro lens to get a $250 rifle sale. If you ask, I'll just stop dialoguing with you and add you to the ignore list.
Frankly my feedback score speaks for itself and I take lots of photos and offer a fair description. If that doesn't suffice, mail order is not for you.
I would simply state something like: "slightly worn rifling, moderate pitting, not dark", rather than an NRA description that I later have to explain and defend. I've never been accused of over-rating a bore, but have received a few that were in my opinion.
X2! I've received one rifle that was described as having a "bright and shiney" bore, only to find that the only shine was the oil coating the bore. The bore of that gun was so fouled with copper and powder fouling, that it was difficult to see the rifling.
To top it off, the chamber had a rust ring in 'er that made using anything but subsonic squib loads hard on extraction.
I now would prefer personal inspection of a given rifles' bore, especially from shmucks that say "I'm a blah-ba-blah collector".
Collector types are not generally gunsmith types.![]()




























