Surplus Ammo and Match Grade Barrels?

patchmasterdoom

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Minuteman
May 23, 2010
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I've been plotting on reloading for a minute now. I've decided I'm going to buy a press when I get back from Afghanistan. I went and downloaded "The ABC's of Reloading", on my Nook to start reading up. I read something in there that caught my attention: The author was talking about putting military rounds through a match grade barrel and the results being a permanent loss of accuracy. The author noted that this was with a WWII era rifle. Is this still true with modern match barrels and modern non match ammo?

*I did a couple of google searches and found the exact quotes from the book, but no answer to the question posed. However, I haven't been able to do a more exhausting search due to 28kps Haji-net.

Thanks for the help!
 
"Surplus Ammo" can mean a few things. Firing Military bullets with gilding metal jackets are not necessarily going to hurt a match grade barrel, however, there are some Military jacketed ammo that the jackets are made from mild steel. Notably, US Military Specification M-80 7.62 NATO ball has a mild steel jacket. Most of the Russian manufactured ammo that is imported here also has a mild steel jacket.

A steady diet of steel jacketed ammo will wear a barrel a bit more than gilding metal jackets will.

This is a good read (a bit lengthy) on barrel wear using steel jacketed ammo and gilding metal jackets in an AR-15 platform rifle. http://www.luckygunner.com/labs/brass-vs-steel-cased-ammo/

I don't run steel jacketed ammo through my precision rifle barrels. I do shoot them through my M1-A's, Garands, FAL's and H/K 91's.
 
Thanks for the link!

From what said book (above posted) stated, it sounded like the shooter put a small number (less than 100 rounds) of non match through his match rifle and then went back to match and noted a significant increase in group size.

What I'm taking from this is typical off the shelf ammo (brass/copper) wont ruin a match barrel, but stay away from steel.
I haven't touched Wolf (with the exception of my AK) since I got tempted by some 200gr .308 and had to kick the action open on my FAL after each shot.
 
I reload all of my own ammo with the exception of a bit of surplus when it comes my way at a very low cost.
My test for any surplus is if a magnet is attracted to the bullet it doesn't get shot in any of my guns.
The only exception to that rule is the SS109 with the steel penetrators.

If I can afford to buy high quality stainless match barrels I can afford to put proper ammo through them.
 
That is one of several reasons the AK's use chrome lined barrels. One other is the Soviet Blok still uses corrosive primers. Not exclusively, but no way I know of to tell until your barrel rusts. Or bolt,firing pin and springs. Or all together.