Ucsdryder
WKR
- Joined
- Jan 24, 2015
- Messages
- 6,650
It’s impossible to say. Did you see that chunk of carbon. I didn’t measure it but it was way bigger than .003” where most shoulders get bumped. I bet closer to .010”.Congrats on the bull!
Would you say your handloads and chamber are the root cause of the issue or do you think it’s from not cleaning for 100 rounds?
I have about 6 rifles that get shot minimum 3 days per week average, and another 6 that get shot average 1 day per week minimum. I don’t think any of those guns have been cleaned in 2 years, and 5 of them have had barrel swaps in the last 3-6 months from wearing out due to round count.
Not a single one has had a major malfunction or barrel life “lessened” by not cleaning. Does this mean everyone should not clean ever? I don’t know. Does it mean that a failure at 100 rounds can routinely happen? Not likely based on what I’ve seen, but not impossible.
Heck, in the last 12 months I’ve seen multiple samples of the most expensive bolt actions you can buy, completely fail due to a little bit of blowing dust getting into the action. Multiple times. Crap happens.
Mitigating risk is a smart strategy in my opinion, but I don’t think the use case/result here was totally due to a simple lack of cleaning. The numbers I’ve seen on a dozen guns recently would lead my thinking towards correlation does not imply causation, due to your minimal data set.
Would you agree?
Here’s my questions, why not clean a rifle before season? Is there a downside in your eyes? Assuming you have time to foul the barrel of course. Why push it? Why take a chance of getting something in there, whether it’s carbon or something foreign? I just can’t think of a good reason, unless one falls into the “cleaning damages the rifling” crowd, which is dumb.