HighUintas
WKR
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2020
- Messages
- 2,698
Boretech makes some good products. You will want to use something made for carbon fouling. Be careful with abrasive products. You can do more harm than good. Also, some good quality bronze brushes will likely be neededGood to know! Thanks.
I was actually in the middle of cleaning it when I took that picture. I had it soaking with accelerator and tactical advantage. I wiped the bore out and then inspected. I will have to get on that with a brush and or some other abrasive.
Out of curiosity, why did you care if there was a carbon ring or not? Did you see your groups go to hell, or velocity swings?
All rifles develop one and it matters on very few. Typically, you only see issues on chambers with tight neck tolerances.
Jeremy
Ahh a new toy. I love new toys. Just wanted to see if there was a problem you were chasing that we could help with.
Jeremy
I think the part that made me really curious about a carbon ring the in Tikka was that I had used a couple different methods to figure out my BTO for touching the lands right after I finished breaking in the barrel when new. I've read that the distance to the lands tend to increase by 0.004 to 0.007 every 100 rounds fired. I just recently bought hornadys coal measuring tool to make it easier to check on my distance to lands. When I measured it with the bullet I'd been using for 500 rounds, I found that the distance was way shorter than I thought. So either I had measured incorrectly when the gun was new and I had been jamming into the lands this whole time, or the lands distance hasn't increased hardly at all, or I had a carbon ring starting to form near the lands. So I wanted to see if there was one in there.
I rechecked my distance to lands last night, and it was the same. So either I measured it wrong a long time ago or my lands are at about the same distance.
Yes I've watched Alex Wheelers method. I'd like to do it that way, but I don't have a punch to remove the roll pin holding my ejector in and don't have a tool to put it back it. I've got my method with the Hornady tool dialed pretty well.