Honing & Polishing a Chamber

Unckebob

WKR
Joined
Aug 21, 2022
Messages
1,167
My X-Bolt was having problems extracting fired cases. Since they fed perfectly, I assumed something was wrong with the extractor. Browning told me to take it to an authorized repair center for a warranty repair.

When I got it back, they told me a couple of things:
1) some gunk and debris had gotten into the extractor (not surprised); and
2) They had honed and polished my chamber

I have a rough idea of what they did based upon the context of reloading dies. I have never heard of anyone doing it to a chamber.

Was what they did good/bad/unimportant?
 
My X-Bolt was having problems extracting fired cases. Since they fed perfectly, I assumed something was wrong with the extractor. Browning told me to take it to an authorized repair center for a warranty repair.

When I got it back, they told me a couple of things:
1) some gunk and debris had gotten into the extractor (not surprised); and
2) They had honed and polished my chamber

I have a rough idea of what they did based upon the context of reloading dies. I have never heard of anyone doing it to a chamber.

Was what they did good/bad/unimportant?
Is it fixed? I had to polish a rough chamber on a McGowen barrel once. Function improved measurably so I said it was "good".
 
Yeah a rough chamber can make it hard to impossible to extract cases sometimes. Their reamer they used for your barrel was probably on it ls last leg
 
Chamber polishing is only good up to a certain level
If a chamber is highly polished extraction becomes more difficult
About 400 grit is said to be the sweet spot
 
Usually it’s because they are undersized a half a thou or so at the base. A little rough is not a bad thing as long as it isnt leaving rings in the brass. Kinda like when an engine builder cross hatches the bore of a cylinder. In the case of a chamber, it helps reduce bolt thrust.
 
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