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barrel wear due to friction?

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31 December 2005, 00:40
stubblejumper
barrel wear due to friction?
I was reading on another forum where a couple of individuals were convinced that high velocity cartridges like the .220 swift and 223wssm wear out barrels due to friction of the bullet in the bore.My experience has always been that barrels burn out due to throat erosion and that it is more prevelent in cartridges with a large case capacity compared to the bore size.I have never seen a barrel actually wear out due to friction under normal use.What have your experiences been in this reguard?
31 December 2005, 00:56
DigitalDan
quote:
wear out barrels due to friction of the bullet in the bore.


Uh, no. Wrong. Incorrect. Logic error loop. That's Beer talkin' by the campfire. No way. Nope.*

If it were true the worst wear would be at the muzzle, where the velocity and friction are the greatest.




If yuro'e corseseyd and dsyelixc can you siltl raed oaky?

31 December 2005, 01:13
Rick 0311
Barrels DO NOT “wear†out due to friction from the bullet...they “burn†out due to the burning/expanding propellent gases.
31 December 2005, 04:00
malm
Look close at the bore of a gun that's lost its edge due to throat errosion. The muzzle end, where the bullet is traveling the fastest, is usually still in prime condition.
31 December 2005, 05:37
jstevens
I've purchased a number of barrels. All the old worn out ones looked like snake skin just in front of the chamber and accuracy went to hell. There is no doubt that bullet friction is the least important factor in barrel wear.


A shot not taken is always a miss
31 December 2005, 06:44
DigitalDan
quote:
they “burn†out due to the burning/expanding propellent gases.



I disagree with that idea too. It is pressure, and to a lessor extent hydrogen embrittlement that does the trick. JMO.




If yuro'e corseseyd and dsyelixc can you siltl raed oaky?

31 December 2005, 07:00
malm
It's a result of heat and pressure.

quote:
Originally posted by Rick0311:
Barrels DO NOT “wear†out due to friction from the bullet...they “burn†out due to the burning/expanding propellent gases.


Sounds like heat and pressure to me.
31 December 2005, 07:09
Ol` Joe
If friction wears out the bore why does a simple rechamber often bring a rifle back to like new accuracy? The whole bore should be wore, not just the chamber end..............
Pressure and heat, friction may do it in a few 100K rds but the throat will go long before it happens.


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"Why shouldn`t truth be stranger then fiction?
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