The subject line didn't give me enough room to properly ask this, so let me set it up. Several years ago I saw an article in one of the gun rags where the writer was shooting many groups in a range session.
For whatever reason, he decided to rig up an IV looking deal (or maybe enema, douche? LOL) with some tubing and ran water through the barrel from the chamber. He would then follow up with some dry patches and continue shooting.
What's your opinion of this as a practice? It would be useful, but leaves too many questions for me on long term effects to the steel. Do you think this would or could crack a barrel? Any metallurgists in the house?
IIRC, these were probably sporter contour barrels. I had a .250 Savage which was the 1984 700 Classic caliber. I bought it new with the hang tags, in the mid 90's out of a gun shop. I fired 20 reloads through it and was getting ready to put it away and noticed a spot on the barrel towards the forend of the stock.
When examined with a loupe, it was a fish hook shaped crack. I've never seen this happen before or after, nor even heard of such a thing. And of course, water didn't have anything to do with that, but it didn't give me the greatest confidence in barrel steel.
For whatever reason, he decided to rig up an IV looking deal (or maybe enema, douche? LOL) with some tubing and ran water through the barrel from the chamber. He would then follow up with some dry patches and continue shooting.
What's your opinion of this as a practice? It would be useful, but leaves too many questions for me on long term effects to the steel. Do you think this would or could crack a barrel? Any metallurgists in the house?
IIRC, these were probably sporter contour barrels. I had a .250 Savage which was the 1984 700 Classic caliber. I bought it new with the hang tags, in the mid 90's out of a gun shop. I fired 20 reloads through it and was getting ready to put it away and noticed a spot on the barrel towards the forend of the stock.
When examined with a loupe, it was a fish hook shaped crack. I've never seen this happen before or after, nor even heard of such a thing. And of course, water didn't have anything to do with that, but it didn't give me the greatest confidence in barrel steel.