Ok, firstly, let's assume that I subscribe to the notion of breaking in a barrel. I know this can be hotly contested. Save your fingertips the trouble of, "you don't need to break in your barrel!" I wasn't planning on going crazy, I was trying to replicate this process: https://www.ssusa.org/articles/2019/9/30/barrel-break-in-how-to-do-it-right. Burnishing the barrel with 5-20 rounds down a stripped barrel, one at a time. The trick is, stripping the barrel. I'm an overthinker looking for some similar-minded individual to tell me I'm crazy or provide some sage wisdom.
I'm doing this on a Savage 12FV custom rifle in 6.5CM that I built, so I know the barrel isn't anything crazy and could use a little breaking in to get some of it's better accuracy earlier. I have the J-Dewey Copper Eliminator rod, Bore-Tech Proof Positive Jags, and using the Bore-Tech Copper Eliminator solution. I'm trying to figure out how crazy I need to get about stripping the copper out of the barrel. For example, if I just follow the procedure on the bottle (3 wet patches, brush 10-15 strokes, 1 wet patch, wait 3 min, dry patch until clean) and I get patches that come out without green/blue on it, but if I put another wet patch down there, I will get more copper (blue/green) coming out on the dry patches. It seems never-ending and very frustrating. My question is: let's assume the barrel is striped and I fire around, if I put some solvent in the barrel and let it sit, then dry patch it until it's clean, is that good? Or should I be doing wet/dry until there is absolutely nothing coming out?
When I start to get clean patches from the first application of solvent, I don't know if that means the copper is off the high spots, and I'm good to send another round? Or if that just means the solvent is no longer breaking down copper, but it's still in the barrel and needs to be removed, or if the copper is sitting in the rifling grooves and the additional applications are just releasing that copper. If so, does that also need to be stripped?
Like I said, I'm an over-thinker, but looking for a little help with my frustration. I want to break in the barrel, but I spent way too much time at the range and just couldn't seem to stop getting copper out on the patches. I'm prioritizing rounds over solvent&patches though. I don't want to be putting more rounds down the barrel if the barrel isn't in the right condition to be burnished by the round. Patches and solvent are cheaper than 6.5CM rounds. Appreciate any insight, always good gouge on here.
I'm doing this on a Savage 12FV custom rifle in 6.5CM that I built, so I know the barrel isn't anything crazy and could use a little breaking in to get some of it's better accuracy earlier. I have the J-Dewey Copper Eliminator rod, Bore-Tech Proof Positive Jags, and using the Bore-Tech Copper Eliminator solution. I'm trying to figure out how crazy I need to get about stripping the copper out of the barrel. For example, if I just follow the procedure on the bottle (3 wet patches, brush 10-15 strokes, 1 wet patch, wait 3 min, dry patch until clean) and I get patches that come out without green/blue on it, but if I put another wet patch down there, I will get more copper (blue/green) coming out on the dry patches. It seems never-ending and very frustrating. My question is: let's assume the barrel is striped and I fire around, if I put some solvent in the barrel and let it sit, then dry patch it until it's clean, is that good? Or should I be doing wet/dry until there is absolutely nothing coming out?
When I start to get clean patches from the first application of solvent, I don't know if that means the copper is off the high spots, and I'm good to send another round? Or if that just means the solvent is no longer breaking down copper, but it's still in the barrel and needs to be removed, or if the copper is sitting in the rifling grooves and the additional applications are just releasing that copper. If so, does that also need to be stripped?
Like I said, I'm an over-thinker, but looking for a little help with my frustration. I want to break in the barrel, but I spent way too much time at the range and just couldn't seem to stop getting copper out on the patches. I'm prioritizing rounds over solvent&patches though. I don't want to be putting more rounds down the barrel if the barrel isn't in the right condition to be burnished by the round. Patches and solvent are cheaper than 6.5CM rounds. Appreciate any insight, always good gouge on here.