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This is what makes me skeptical about it too. You get a theoretical advantage which probably isn't borne out because barrel steel is not hardened to a point where the additional martensite formation gives any advantage.I did a bit of research on that a while ago. Theoretically there could be a benefit obtained in transforming some of the remaining austenite to martensite. Realistically, most of the papers found little to no measurable gain.
Cryogenic hardening has several metallurgical effects, most of them positive from a machining aspect.Benchmark cryo dips all of their barrels. Not sure why they would take the time and expense to do this if it does nothing.
Cryogenic hardening has several metallurgical effects, most of them positive from a machining aspect.
Cryogenic hardening, in and of itself, does nothing to improve accuracy. Improved accuracy is usually the "benefit" sold to shooters.
It's not as simple as it appears
Interesting insight.
So if I understand correctly does the improved machining benefit of a cryogenic treated barrel ultimately result in better accuracy?
It's based on 26 years in the mfg industryInteresting insight.
Not necessarilySo if I understand correctly does the improved machining benefit of a cryogenic treated barrel ultimately result in better accuracy?
haha...some shotgun manf touted "cryo treated"....like my Benelli SBE II.
Its a joke...on a shotgun barrel? Its basically an empty pipe and I can't see how cryo would do a damn thing for a proximity weapon. But I have been proved wrong many, many times in the past! haha
But it made for good marketing to those who didn't know better.
It's based on 26 years in the mfg industry
Not necessarily
I could not tell you if the Bartlein barrels I have used were or were not frozen , but of the two they really have been great barrels so far one lasted 7250 round with 6.5 creedmoor and I have not heard of any one getting that for barrel life the most i saw was 4k in a video online , It could be I never pushed hot rounds maybe maybe not but until I meet another person with that many rounds shot heck only the last 250 rounds did it show any signs that it was time to replace it the new one may or may not last that long I hope it does cause at 1k per barrel that price really hits me at least but so far it's shooting as good as the first . And while I like to say it's the equipment working really good I know without the person pulling the trigger doing his job properly and in my case a hell of a lot of luck the equipment is well worthless , but there quality sure made a believer out of me , and I am a fan .
Whatever.
Yeah heaven fucking forbid someone speak from a position of real knowledge, instead of spouting whatever bullshit one found on arfcom
I sense some sunk cost bias from someone who wasted money on this
The benefit comes (came?) From post machining from a better quality crystalline structure (someone pointed out the correct word previously).
This was done in the 70s to mid 80s. We have 35 years of better cutting oils, raw material quality, and cutting tool technology (angled, CNC grinders, etc).
It is absolutely redundant now.