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-   -   What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel? (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/guns/165377-what-bullet-jump-expect-new-barrel.html)

BTM 11-15-2006 07:48 PM

What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel?
 
I just had a 'smith rebarrel my 22-250 with a Lilja heavy barrel. Even after careful break-in, it shot terribly (2" at 100 yds). I got out the Stoney Point gauge, and it shows 0.15" of bullet jump. My understanding is that 0.02-0.04" is more the norm, but the 'smith said there's nothing he can do for me.

I've already checked the usual suspects (free floated barrel, scope screws, ammo, etc.), and I think the culprit is excessively long bullet jump. For this I paid $700???

I returned the rifle to him tonight. He said he'd "look at it," but I didn't leave his shop with much of a warm and fuzzy feeling.

Am I getting hosed?

nchawkeye 11-15-2006 07:53 PM

RE: What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel?
 
Are you talking about headspace???

stubblejumper 11-15-2006 08:21 PM

RE: What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel?
 
How many loads have you tried?

[email protected] 11-15-2006 08:27 PM

RE: What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel?
 
I think your talking about freebore, all I know is that a bullet which has to travel an excessive distance before engaging the rifling can become slightly upset and accuracy goes south. Also a bullet which is seated to contact the rifling will make chamber pressure rise sharply. Might you seat your bullets further out of the case and minimise the jump, if your magazine will allow it. Also isn't that deminsion machined into the barrel by the manufactuer.? If so would you go to the gunsmith for a solution or to the Mfgr. Just thinking a little over my head, Glenn.

handloader1 11-16-2006 12:19 AM

RE: What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel?
 
Since the rifle has a Lilja barrel, andthe rebarrel job ranyou $700.00 the rifle should shoot very well. Don't let the gunsmith get away with it.

The same thing happened to a friend of mine; the best his rifle would group is 2.5", but he did not pressure the gunsmith, and he is stuck with a unaccurate rifle. Good luck.

Dan in Alaska 11-16-2006 01:12 AM

RE: What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel?
 
Fifteen thousandths doesn't sound like a whole lot of free-bore. If I remember correctly, Weatherby rifles have much more than that, right from the factory. How does the crown on the muzzle look? A poorly machined or damaged crown can ruin accuracy in a hurry. The good news is that recrowning the barrel should be inexpensive and easy to do.

After you've exhausted all other possible solutions (ammo, bullet seating depth, scope, crown, etc.), and if your current gunsmith is unable/unwilling to help you, another gunsmith should be able to turn down the back of the barrel and recut the chamber. In effect, you can start over, without having to buy a new barrel or spend another $700.

Good luck.

BTM 11-16-2006 04:46 AM

RE: What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel?
 
Thanks for the replies so far, gentlemen.

Re.seating the bullet out further, the cartridge OAL is already a hair above max; any further lengthening and the cartridges wouldn't fit in the magazine.

I'm not talking about headspace or freebore, I'm talking about bullet jump, which is the word Stoney Point uses to describe the term. Headspace is not a problem, since the round seats firmly against the shoulder of the chamber.

I've tried two loads: My reloads that always shot well in the previous factory barrel, plus some factory Winchesters. Both shoot poorly.

If the crown is bad on a new barrel, then I assume it's the gunsmiths problem and something he should fix.

Keep the comments coming, guys!

Rootsy 11-16-2006 05:20 AM

RE: What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel?
 
one hundred fifty thousandhs (.150) is excessive if that is the distance from the riflling to the ogive of the bullet... therefore you have a deep throat in that barrel.... but you don't say what you are shooting from it, which bullet, if you are handloading and what your COL is....

when that barrel was chambered, a reamer was used to cut it... that reamer has a set throat length on it... which is pretty much "standard"... to change the throat length you'd have to custom grind a reamer (or find one with a shorter throat already) to shorten the throat...

so, in order to correct the length of bullet ogive to rifling you'll have no other option than to either A) seat the bullet out further or B) find a longer bullet.

even if you found a reamer with a shorter throat you'd have to remove the barrel, face off the end to shorten up the chamber (short chamber the barrel) and run the new reamer in to depth and then reset headspace....

btw, i am not of the school where just a barrel will transform a gun into a cloverleaf generator... has to be right from the recoil pad to the crown IMHO.... that includes the ammunition in the chamber... and that can be the most frustrating part as the combinations of bullets, powders, primers, cases and reloading methods for 22 caliber are endless...

JR

Rebel Hog 11-16-2006 05:34 AM

RE: What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel?
 
The cover on a book of matches is .020, so .150 is a hell of alot.Which ever way the bullet prints on the rifling, it's the way it's going to come out!

Rebel Hog 11-16-2006 05:42 AM

RE: What bullet jump to expect from a new barrel?
 

ORIGINAL: BTM

I'm not talking about headspace or freebore, I'm talking about bullet jump, which is the word Stoney Point uses to describe the term. .

The distance the bullet has to travel before it contacts the rifling has to do with how much Free Bore the barrel has.


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