Educate me on this infamous thing called a Carbon Ring.

Do you have a bore scope? If not there you no way you can say I have never had a carbon ring. As stated above you may but just don't notice it in the performance of the rifle.

I find that rifles which are over bored tend to develop carbon rings more readily than non-over bored rifles. For example my 7PRC seems to develop carbon rings while my 35 Whelen does not. If you stay on top of them and clean them up before they get to bad they are easy to manage. Only way to know is either with a bore scope or a sudden increase in velocity or loss of accuracy. With respect to velocity you will only know if you routinely use a chronological when shooting.
I did not intend to imply that I have never had one, but I have never experienced the issues others have, like a sudden loss of accuracy that returns after cleaning, blown primers, and difficulty chambering. While I admit I miss targets, I am aware when my systems are not performing as they should and look to determine the cause, which is typically me having a bad day, the wind, or both.
I never noticed anything in my 7PRC.
 
It's a real thing, for sure. Why it develops in some rifles but not others, I cannot say.

Sierra had some literature documenting it even back in the 1990's. They didn't call it a carbon ring, they called it 'hard powder fouling' or something of that nature, and described it almost like a ceramic that developed in higher intensity cartridges.

I think with most rifles the gas pressure is high enough that the rifle sort of self-cleans, like an oven at high heat. I can't say why some individual barrels tend to foul in spite of this. I suspect it's a rough barrel finish that gives carbon a place to stick in the first place, but that's only a guess. But I can say that it doesn't seem to be an issue at all with better barrels (meaning those that have higher interior finishes, regardless of other aspects) and lower intensity cartridges, meaning that if you start with a quality barrel and don't hotrod the thing, it's less of a factor.
Thanks. I will dig into Sierra's stuff.
 
Correct, here's one in my 6.5 PRC that was actually causing pressure issues after about 40 rounds. Note to self, don't trim brass too short. I cleaned it and measured with a sinclair gauge so I'm only trimming .005" from max case length now. Also need to see if I can get my Hornady trimmer to leave less of a chamfer on the case. View attachment 1021508
Are you loading hot?
 
Same, shoot my 6.5 PRC a lot. Didn’t clean the barrel ever, got some pierced primers, learned about carbon rings, cleaned, no issue since. While I don’t love cleaning barrels, I do make an effort to clean them every couple hundred rounds now and pay better attention to if bolt lift starts getting stiff.
Yeah the PRC is really susceptible, and people who are anal about case trimming suffer the most
 
Same, shoot my 6.5 PRC a lot. Didn’t clean the barrel ever, got some pierced primers, learned about carbon rings, cleaned, no issue since. While I don’t love cleaning barrels, I do make an effort to clean them every couple hundred rounds now and pay better attention to if bolt lift starts getting stiff.
How many rounds before you start seeing pressure?
 
Educate me here. Is that dark stripe the carbon ring? I just got a bore scope and I would like to know what I’m looking for.
Thanks
No, in this case the strip is shadow (yellow), red is the chamber behind the mirror.
1738378146122.jpg

Here is another shot of an ugly spot without the shadow. It demonstrates why running an oild patch down the bore is a decent idea. Rifle still shoots well, so I haven't worried about it, but probably should.
1738377830349.jpg
 
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