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-   -   mild pitting in new revolver bore????? (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/guns/388004-mild-pitting-new-revolver-bore.html)

burniegoeasily 12-12-2013 05:41 AM

mild pitting in new revolver bore?????
 
I posted this in the gunsmithing forum with not responses, so I thought I would try here. I recently bought a new S and W 357. After putting about 200 rounds through it i noticed there was a small amount of pitting inside the barrel near the chamber. runs in a line across both lands and grooves. I keep the gun cleaned and oiled. It is minimal so should i be concerned? It shoots spot on, so should I send it back for repair or not worry about it?

Bbj270 12-12-2013 07:30 AM

I would call s&w and see what they say. If you cleaned it properly it should not have done that. I say call them.

Nomercy448 12-12-2013 12:05 PM

How far in front of the forcing cone is the pitting?

burniegoeasily 12-13-2013 05:36 AM

about a 1cm in front of the force cone. The gun has a 6" barrel. It is a real tack driver, very accurate. I have never had a new barrel pit, so it brings up questions as to why it happened. I have no problem sending it back except paying another 50 bucks for shipping. Yea, I know, I'm a tight wad but it kind of perturbs me. I have thought about lapping the barrel but really do not think it would address the pitting issue. besides, the pitting is very minimal. I have polished it a bit with 0000 steel wool to smooth over any edges on the pitting, if there was any. And kind of think of finish shooting in the barrel and see if some of the pitting polishes out.

Nomercy448 12-13-2013 07:22 AM

You're talking about a "ring of pitting" in the bore right? Is it symmetrical around the bore or not?

Shooting lead or jacketed bullets? Cool loads, hot stuff, or average play? 38/357? Recovered any bullets from it that weren't damaged?

burniegoeasily 12-13-2013 07:26 AM

So far I have shot just fmj 38sp and jhp 357s. Both shoot great. "symmetrical around the bore or not" , are you referring to the pitting? If so, it is not in a ring, it is a line about a 1 cm long that runs in line with the barrel across one land and one grove.

Bullcamp82834 12-13-2013 09:30 AM

I'd take it to someone who had a bore scope and get a real good look at the situation to satisfy my own curiosity.

But then......

A little pitting in a revolver barrel is disconcerting to look at but rarely affects accuracy. If you are really having OCD about it ship it back to S&W for a fix.
Myself, if the gun was shooting as good as you describe I wouldn't do a thing.

burniegoeasily 12-13-2013 10:35 AM


Originally Posted by Bullcamp82834 (Post 4107206)
I'd take it to someone who had a bore scope and get a real good look at the situation to satisfy my own curiosity.

But then......

A little pitting in a revolver barrel is disconcerting to look at but rarely affects accuracy. If you are really having OCD about it ship it back to S&W for a fix.
Myself, if the gun was shooting as good as you describe I wouldn't do a thing.

That is what I was thinking. I was just concerned since it was a new gun. Heck, my oldest guns don't even have pits in them. I have Nagants from the 30s and H and R revolvers from the 50s that are pit free.

Nomercy448 12-13-2013 01:14 PM

How is the cylinder alignment at lock up? If it's pitting in one specific spot, it may have an alignment or end shake issue, so you're sheering/meal forming the bullet slightly, then leaving opportunity for gas to sneak past the bullet. That gap will act like a blow torch though as the hot gases sneak through a tiny cross section (blistering velocity!!). May not be it, but could be one explanation.

I'm not prone to believe that you are the type that let moisture taint the bore and rusted it, so I'm more prone to believe it's scorching.

My OCD self would force me to send it back if it were me. I'd also have faith that the new barrel would also shoot well, or I'd send it back again, but I'd eat my own face knowing it was pitting in there.

Bullcamp82834 12-13-2013 04:44 PM


Originally Posted by burniegoeasily (Post 4107242)
That is what I was thinking. I was just concerned since it was a new gun. Heck, my oldest guns don't even have pits in them. I have Nagants from the 30s and H and R revolvers from the 50s that are pit free.

I don't blame you for being irritated about this pitting in a new barrel. It shouldn't be there.
But like my grandpa always said...... If your rounds are right on target it really doesn't matter what your gun looks like or if your shooting stance is textbook or not. If you are hitting the mark everything is right, even if it doesn't look that way.


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