10 November 2006, 21:52
SaeedAmazing!
Gentlemen,
We have ordered a set of digital and video adaptors for our bore scope, hoping to take photos of some of the barrels we have.
We have some old barrels that do not seem to have any more rifling in them. Others look like the surface of the moon with all its craters.
Walter, in his infinite wisdom, is thinking of taking a video of the bullet while it is moving inside the barrel!
I know this is impossible, at least with what we have, but, our genius is going to spend many sleepless nights finding why!
10 November 2006, 22:22
reindeerSaeed,
As you know the moon is full of craters and yet it is one of the most beautiful heavenly objects to observe from over here.
As you know aswell, many women defenitely look more beautiful with their clothes on.
As you also know the bore of many a gunbarrel is toolmarked from the day it was produced, rusted, pitted by false cleaning methods or no cleaning at all, maybe even shot out but still delivers satisfying accuracy to its owner
My point is: If it aint broke, don't fix it.
Why would you take a chance of shattering the faith you have in a barrel by looking through its bore and deciding that there is no way this barrel can perform the way it does because of the ugly things that are revealed by the use of your borescope?
11 November 2006, 00:05
richjquote:
Walter, in his infinite wisdom, is thinking of taking a video of the bullet while it is moving inside the barrel!
90% mirror which will eat itself or be pushed free from the wave.
Rich
11 November 2006, 00:20
Cheechakoquote:
Originally posted by reindeer:
Why would you take a chance of shattering the faith you have in a barrel by looking through its bore and deciding that there is no way this barrel can perform the way it does because of the ugly things that are revealed by the use of your borescope?
Well said, and oh so true. I have a Remington factory varmint weight 308W barrel that shot groups a lot smaller than it should have. One day I looked down it with a friends bore-scope and was floored. Scratches, gouges, rings, pits, you name it. It looked like the inside of a waterpipe. After that I never had confidence in the barrel and it now sits in my garage on the back of my workbench.

Ray
11 November 2006, 04:02
duikermanquote:
We have ordered a set of digital and video adaptors for our bore scope, hoping to take photos of some of the barrels we have.
Hey, that's great.
Perhaps you guys might take several photos of barrels (new) from several barrel makers so we can all see what differences exist between them. It would be good to loose some of the emotion and prejudice we all have about certain barrel makers.
11 November 2006, 20:00
RicochetLots of work has been done by military-sponsored investigators videoing bullets moving down the bore, using an angled mirror in front of the muzzle as suggested above. It takes a new mirror for each shot. I've read that it can reveal some surprises, like the bullet starting moving out of the case, stopping on encountering the rifling, and starting again.
11 November 2006, 20:57
yetiPut Walter, his video camera and the rocket sled into the Fantastic Voyage shrinking machine, get 'em into the barrel...shouldn't be much of a problem.
11 November 2006, 21:07
vanIt,s interesting that i have a 1894 win,cal 32 special that was made in 1897 with outward conditions as 95%-(75 orginal. The rifiling looks like it has been on the moon,but it will shoot a consistant 1 3/4-2" at 100yds,so that just blows the pitting and clean cut rifiling theory up in smoke to some extent i think. van
12 November 2006, 02:32
lawndartHi Saeed,
What brand of bore scope are you using? I am interested in geting one with still photograph/video capabilities. I could make a shooter's version of a horror movie.
Thank you,
lawndart