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Break-In and Cleaning
by Jack Krieger
BREAK-IN
With any premium barrel that has been finish lapped
-- such as your Krieger Barrel --, the lay or
direction of the finish is in the direction of the
bullet travel, so fouling is minimal. This is true
of any properly finish-lapped barrel regardless of
how it is rifled. If it is not finish-lapped, there
will be reamer marks left in the bore that are
directly across the direction of the bullet travel.
This occurs even in a button-rifled barrel as the
button cannot completely iron out these reamer
marks.
Because the lay of the finish is in the direction of
the bullet travel, very little is done to the bore
during break-in, but the throat is another story.
When your barrel is chambered, by necessity there
are reamer marks left in the throat that are across
the lands, i.e. across the direction of the bullet
travel. In a new barrel they are very distinct; much
like the teeth on a very fine file. When the bullet
is forced into the throat, copper dust is released
into the gas which at this temperature and pressure
is actually a plasma. The copper dust is vaporized
in this gas and is carried down the barrel. As the
gas expands and cools, the copper comes out of
suspension and is deposited in the bore. This makes
it appear as if the source of the fouling is the
bore when it is actually for the most part the new
throat. If this copper is allowed to stay in the
bore, and subsequent bullets and deposits are fired
over it; copper which adheres well to itself, will
build up quickly and may be difficult to remove
later. So when we break in a barrel, our goal is to
get the throat polished without allowing copper to
build up in the bore. This is the reasoning for the
"fire-one-shot-and-clean" procedure.
Barrels will vary slightly in how many rounds they
take to break in because of things like slightly
different machinability of the steel, or steel
chemistry, or the condition of the chambering
reamer, etc. . . For example a chrome moly barrel
may take longer to break in than stainless steel
because it is more abrasion resistant even though it
is the same hardness. Also chrome moly has a little
more of an affinity for copper than stainless steel
so it will usually show a little more "color" if you
are using a chemical cleaner. (Chrome moly and
stainless steel are different materials with some
things in common and others different.) Rim Fire
barrels can take an extremely long time to break in
-- sometimes requiring several hundred rounds or
more. But cleaning can be lengthened to every 25-50
rounds. The break-in procedure and the clearing
procedure are really the same except for the
frequency. Remember the goal is to get or keep the
barrel clean while polishing out the throat.
Finally, the best way to break-in the barrel is to
observe when the barrel is broken in; i.e. when the
fouling is reduced. This is better than some set
number of cycles of "shoot and clean" as many owners
report practically no fouling after the first few
shots, and more break-in would be pointless.
Conversely, if more is required, a set number would
not address that either. Besides, cleaning is not a
completely benign procedure so it should be done
carefully and no more than necessary.
CLEANING
This section on cleaning is not intended to
be a detailed instruction, but rather to point out a
few "do’s and don’ts". Instructions furnished with
bore cleaners, equipment, etc. should be followed
unless they would conflict with these "do’s and
don’ts."
You should use a good quality straight cleaning rod
with a freely rotating handle and a rod guide that
fits both your receiver raceway and the rod snugly.
How straight and how snug? The object is to make
sure the rod cannot touch the bore. With service
rifle barrels a good rod and guide set-up is
especially important as all the cleaning must be
done from the muzzle and even slight damage to the
barrel crown is extremely detrimental to accuracy.
There are two basic types of bore cleaners --
chemical and abrasive. The chemical cleaners are
usually a blend of various ingredients including
oils and ammonia that attack the copper. The
abrasive cleaners generally contain no chemicals and
are an oil, wax, or grease base with an extremely
fine abrasive such as chalk, clay, or gypsum. They
clean by mechanically removing the fouling. Both are
good, and we feel that neither will damage the bore
when used properly.
So what is the proper way to use them? First, not
all chemical cleaners are compatible with each
other. Some, when used together at a certain
temperature, can cause severe pitting of the barrel
-- even stainless steel barrels. It is fine to use
two different cleaners as long as you completely
remove the first cleaner from the barrel before
cleaning with the second. And, of course, never mix
them in the same bottle.
Follow instructions on the bottle as far as soak
time, etc. . . Always clean from the breech whenever
possible, pushing the patch or swab up to the muzzle
and then back without completely exiting the muzzle.
If you exit the muzzle, the rod is going to touch
the bore and be dragged back in across the crown
followed by the patch or brush. Try to avoid
dragging things in and out of the muzzle. It will
eventually cause uneven wear of the crown. Accuracy
will suffer and this can lead you to believe the
barrel is shot out, when in fact, it still may have
a lot of serviceable life left. A barrel with a worn
or damaged crown can be re-crowned and accuracy will
usually return.
The chemical cleaners may be the best way to clean
service rifle barrels that must be cleaned from the
muzzle -- i.e. M1 Garand, M14, etc. . .-- because
this method avoids all the scrubbing necessary with
the abrasive cleaners and the danger of damaging the
crown. But again, as long as the rod doesn’t touch
the crown, abrasive cleaners should be fine.
Abrasive cleaners work very well. They do not damage
the bore, they clean all types of fouling (copper
powder, lead, plastic), and they have the added
advantage of polishing the throat both in "break in"
and later on when the throat begins to roughen again
from the rounds fired. One national champion we know
polishes the throats on his rifles every several
hundred rounds or so with diamond paste to extend
their accuracy life.
Again, as with the chemical cleaners, a good rod and
rod guide is necessary. A jag with a patch wrapped
around it works well. Apply the cleaner and begin
scrubbing in short, rather fast strokes of about two
to four inches in length. Concentrate most of the
strokes in the throat area decreasing the number as
you go toward the muzzle. Make a few full-length
passes while avoiding exiting the muzzle completely,
but do partially exit for about six strokes. You can
avoid accidentally exiting by mounting the rifle in
a vise or holder of some sort and blocking the rod
at the muzzle with the wall or something to keep it
from completely exiting.
This sheet is intended to touch on the critical
areas of break-in and cleaning and is not intended
as a complete, step-by-step guide or recommendation
of any product.
The following is a guide to "break-in" based on our
experience. This is not a hard and fast rule, only a
guide. Some barrel, chamber, bullet, primer, powder,
pressure, velocity etc. combinations may require
more cycles some less!
It is a good idea to just observe what the barrel is
telling you with its fouling pattern. But once it is
broken in, there is no need to continue breaking it
in.
Initially you should perform the
shoot-one-shot-and-clean cycle for five cycles. If
fouling hasn’t reduced, fire five more cycles and so
on until fouling begins to drop off. At that point
shoot three shots before cleaning and observe. If
fouling is reduced, fire five shots before cleaning.
It is interesting to shoot groups during the three
and five shot cycles.
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Stainless |
Chrome moly |
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5 one-shot cycles |
5 - 25 - one-shot cycles |
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1 three-shot cycle |
2 - three-shot cycles |
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1 five-shot cycle |
1 five-shot cycle |
KRIEGER BARRELS, INC.
N114 W18697 Clinton Drive, Germantown, WI 53022
PH: 414-255-9593 FAX: 414-255-9586
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