ImBillT
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2018
- Messages
- 3,896
Most of the necessity for break in is related to the chamber reamer creating circular burrs in the throat. If you shoot, clean, shoot, clean, for a few cycles until you stop getting gone of copper after just one shot, then shoot 2-3, and clean, until you’ve shot 20-30 shots, then a hand lapped barrel should stop fouling and you haven’t gone through all that much effort. On the other hand, if you shoot 15-20 shots, that excess fouling can build up to a level that’s difficult to clean, and your barrel could end up not getting to that stabile fouling level for quite a few more shots. All along the way you’ve probably been developing a load that is not really valid. If your smith did a good job setting up your barrel, it’s possible that you will need no break-in at all, and it’s obvious quickly because you won’t get any copper on your patches. If your barrel isn’t hand lapped, then it may foul excessively for eternity whether you break-in or not. If you buy a custom barrel, it’s no big deal to clean after the first shot. If you don’t get a lot of copper on your patch, then shoot 2-3 and clean, if there’s still no copper, shoot 5-6, and if it isn’t bad, then you’re done. If you got copper after the first shot, or first string of 3, then shoot 1-3 and clean, and repeat until your patches aren’t all coppery. If it takes more than a few cycles, especially if you’re still getting a lot of fouling after fifty shots, then you probably have a barrel that’s gonna foul forever unless you lap it yourself.