Barrel break in and load development

Joined
Jan 23, 2022
Messages
86
Sometimes the manufacturer will have a recommended procedure. I know that Weatherby has a method that they recommend for their rifles. Check with Savage.
 

Point Man

Lil-Rokslider
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Jul 7, 2023
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Location
Ohio
I am in the no need to break-in camp and that's after doing the break-in procedures many times before. It just lessens the life of your barrel more and burns ammo, especially with a 7 mag. Most can't even see the difference in accuracy, if there is any, because they simply can't shoot that well.
 
Joined
Jul 23, 2024
Messages
12
Did anyone answer the question of when you actually start working up a load after performing whatever break in procedure you follow? Do you send a predetermined number of factory rounds through the barrel first? Chronograph a specific load until velocities seen to stabilize?

I load for 223 now and am just getting into loading for 6.5CM and 7RM, but with the cost of components being substantially more for the larger cartridges I want to try to avoid wasting a bunch of money.
 
Joined
Jul 23, 2024
Messages
12
Barrel break in is a complete waste of time anyway.
So, do you just start load dev on an unfired rifle from the get? Your velocity/groups don't change after the first ~100 rounds? A 1-1.5 MOA load combo won't change after the initial barrel wear in? That's what I am trying to understand... I don't care about barrel break in unless not doing some form of break in is going to result in me having to redo load dev after 100 rounds... Should I just fireform 50-100 factory rounds and then start load dev?
 

JGRaider

WKR
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Jul 3, 2019
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2,000
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West Texas
I scrub the barrel clean and then apply Dyna Bore Coat to the barrel. I follow their directions, then start development. Works for me.
 
Joined
Jan 23, 2022
Messages
86
So, do you just start load dev on an unfired rifle from the get? Your velocity/groups don't change after the first ~100 rounds? A 1-1.5 MOA load combo won't change after the initial barrel wear in? That's what I am trying to understand... I don't care about barrel break in unless not doing some form of break in is going to result in me having to redo load dev after 100 rounds... Should I just fireform 50-100 factory rounds and then start load dev?

Two types: There is the new barrel break-in sometimes recommended by a barrel manufacturer and then there is the second barrel break-in where the velocity may increase after 100-150 rounds. The new barrel break-in might consist of shot/clean regime for first 10-20 rounds depending on manufacturer. This is the procedure that some folks are talking about being a waste of time. Whether you choose to do this or not is up to you and but go ahead and work up a good load at the onset (or after 10-15 rounds) and then revisit the load for possible modifications after 100-150 rounds. It is best if you have a chronograph.
 
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