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That might be a shadow, .... or heavy carbon.Is the dark black line at the neck to freebore transition carbon or just the transition?
Ive got ~230-240 rounds on it. I clean with boretech c4 after every range session. Its been cleaned at least 5x’s since starting load development.Hard to tell from that picture. Might help if you started cleaning the barrel, and then checked again. The carbon ring will be more difficult to get rid of than the other fouling, so it should become obvious if you have one.
I had the same issue in a 6.5 AI barrel recently. I let it go close to 800 rounds without a cleaning (foolish of me), and started to get pressure signs, wild velocity spikes, and degradation of accuracy. Boretech C4 and a brush cleaned up the ring without too much difficulty.
So with that do you think there is a carbon ring in my barrel?Here you go.. blue line is the end of the chamber and the start of the freebore.
Between the red lines is where you see a carbon ring form if your brass is trimmed properly.
View attachment 8255525
Cant tell how hard the carbon is to tell if it would constitute a "ring" but thats definitely not a clean looking throat. Keep hammering more carbon on top of whats already there and youll have one soon enough if tis not already hardened.So with that do you think there is a carbon ring in my barrel?
I believe I took that pic with a dirty barrel. Ive got about 230 ish rounds and have cleaned it 4-5 times. I clean it after every range session. Ill do what I think is a good cleaning and get some more pics after without a chambered piece of brassWithout a case in the chamber, we might be able to see that area better. That is a good bit of carbon there and into the throat area. Lot of powder and small hole will do that and it will not take long either. I like to not let it build up. I'm not from the let'er eat til she don't want no more club.
It’s just the transition. If you look at a chamber reamer diagram you will see it on there. It is the transition to the neck diameter to the throat diameter. Random reamer print I found below and your area of concern circled in red, but that “black line” is this transition.Is the dark black line at the neck to freebore transition carbon or just the transition?
ThanksIt’s just the transition. If you look at a chamber reamer diagram you will see it on there. It is the transition to the neck diameter to the throat diameter. Random reamer print I found below and your area of concern circled in red, but that “black line” is this transition.
The carbon ring does NOT form in the freebore, it forms in front of the case mouth before the step up to the freebore. You are looking at hard carbon that won’t affect anything. You 100% do not have a carbon ring in that picture. If there was one starting to form it’s gone. Don’t under trim your brass and you won’t have to worry about one anytime soon. The green line is where it forms
The carbon ring does NOT form in the freebore, it forms in the chamber between the end of the case mouth and before the step up to the freebore hence why trimming brass too short exacerbates the problem. This area is where the green line is drawn albeit it is a little off because it’s just for reference but that is the general area. @Huskydriver Even your picture you posted says in the caption “with carbon ring formed at the end of the chamber neck area”Sorry but that is incorrect. Where you placed the green line is not the freebore/throat/lead. It is still in the chamber where his brass would be. Where your red arrow is, is where a carbon ring typically forms unless you are really overtrimming your brass.
Op and yes there typically will always be some discoloration there but it looks ring free to me. Another thread with a good diagram and pic for reference
For sure not on brass as it is wet tumbled after lubing and resizing. I usually use a chamber mop too after cleaningDid you leave oily residue in your chamber from cleaning it? Was your brass still covered in lube? If so you didn’t get a good grip from the brass to the chamber wall this increased bolt thrust. After cleaning, and right before shooting I clean the chamber out with a bore mop and acetone, that way you don’t have any residual oil in there causing pressure issues
Yes it does.The carbon ring does NOT form in the freebore, it forms in the chamber between the end of the case mouth and before the step up to the freebore hence why trimming brass too short exacerbates the problem. This area is where the green line is drawn albeit it is a little off because it’s just for reference but that is the general area. @Huskydriver Even your picture you posted says in the caption “with carbon ring formed at the end of the chamber neck area”
The carbon ring does NOT form in the freebore, it forms in front of the case mouth before the step up to the freebore. You are looking at hard carbon that won’t affect anything. You 100% do not have a carbon ring in that picture. If there was one starting to form it’s gone. Don’t under trim your brass and you won’t have to worry about one anytime soon. The green line is where it forms
It grown in the gap between the end of the case mouth and the step up to the freebore. And when it grows large enough, it becomes thicker than the case neck thickness thus causing you to have to seat the bullets through it as the bullet enters the freebore. This is why trimming short brass makes the problem worse. I know people have tried to correct this but it is not entirely correct. If you have any documentation that supports your claim please share it, I’m not saying my mind can’t be changed but from everything I have seen, experienced and researched it supports the carbon ring grown in that gap.Yes it does.
As several have tried to correct you on.
You are simply describing a dirty chamber.
I wish people would stop trying to change the meaning of terms to fit misconceptions.
If a carbon ring was located on the chamber mouth then how would it grow large enough to be impinging on the bullets bearing surface? It can’t.
So based on your opinion do you think I have a carbon ring in the freebore area? Based on the pics I posted above post cleaning.Carbon ring that affects your pressure is in the freebore area where the diameter is larger than bullet diameter. Where and how wide it forms depends on chamber specs, bullet shape and seating depth. Some cartridges are more susceptible to issues than others.
The simplest way I can explain it:
You have a hypothetical brand new barrel that has freebore length 0.010" and freebore diameter larger than bullet/groove diameter. Carbon builds up at the half way point (0.005") and fills the clearance completely. So now you have a ring that is at 0.005" and narrowed diameter to the equivalent of your bullet/groove diameter at that section, which essentially cuts your initial available freebore volume by 50%.
It would mimic the effects of having a short or narrow freebore machined into the barrel to begin with and the associated increased chamber pressure. For more information, look into the pressure effects of freebore.
Pic below - Somewhere inside the red area is where the carbon ring will form, starting from the end of the second shoulder of the chamber neck area on forwards towards the lands/grooves.
View attachment 8257788
So the cracked mountain just north of the green line is the start of the chamber not carbon ring?
That is not a carbon ring. Carbon ring forms around the top of the case mouth, not in front of the case mouth.22 creed. Having weird pressure issues. Is this a carbon ring?