I've been doing some testing of longer and higher-quality bullets in an M1 carbine and have concluded that the slow rifling used by all carbine barrels needs to be faster: 1-in-12 or 1-in-14 would be appropriate. I was thinking about boring and lining my Criterion barrel.
Then I remembered that a few months ago I read an article about shot-out/damaged .30 caliber barrels being "fixed" by cutting them down to stubs and then grafting on a 1903 .30 barrel. I *think* this was done to Garand barrels, but may well have been done to M1 carbine barrels.
The advantages (as I see them) are that rather than boring and lining my good (and expensive) M1 Carbine Criterion barrel, I could use one of the de-milled short barrels I got from Fulton Armory. The barrel to be grafted on could be a good take-off. So the stub could be bored and the barrel to be grafted would just need to be turned-down enough to fit the length of the stub.
I have the reamer and gauges.
Has anyone heard of or done this?
(I realize that trying to get accuracy from an M1 carbine may be an exercise in futility, but I've been playing with this for several years, off and on, and this is the last possible solution I want to try.)
Thank you,
Richard
Then I remembered that a few months ago I read an article about shot-out/damaged .30 caliber barrels being "fixed" by cutting them down to stubs and then grafting on a 1903 .30 barrel. I *think* this was done to Garand barrels, but may well have been done to M1 carbine barrels.
The advantages (as I see them) are that rather than boring and lining my good (and expensive) M1 Carbine Criterion barrel, I could use one of the de-milled short barrels I got from Fulton Armory. The barrel to be grafted on could be a good take-off. So the stub could be bored and the barrel to be grafted would just need to be turned-down enough to fit the length of the stub.
I have the reamer and gauges.
Has anyone heard of or done this?
(I realize that trying to get accuracy from an M1 carbine may be an exercise in futility, but I've been playing with this for several years, off and on, and this is the last possible solution I want to try.)
Thank you,
Richard