The barrel on my old 835 is rough even after hours of polishing. It looks like water spots all the way through the barrel, I guess it's just rough tool marks? I have polished with just about everything I can except emory paper or a flex-hone. Anyone ever flexhone an 835 barrel? Is there anywhere you would recommend I could send it to polish these spots out?
Thanks
I have tried other methods, but have found that NOTHING works as fast as the flex hone with their oil. It has worked for me on several rough barrels. Got mine from Midway USA.
Good luck and God Bless
Ray
I've used fine steel wool. How is she shootin?
Get the green scotch brite pad. Wood rod and drill
I have used steel wool and also green scotch-brite pads loaded with JB bore paste and also nonembedding valve grinding compound chucked in a 1/2" electric drill. So far nothing has touched it in several hundred passes.
Well, I nearly have it knocked out now. I went to ACE Hardware to get a new bench vice and I stumbled around the corner and saw this weird looking sand paper. It is drywall sanding paper, nice big holes in it. It went from 50 through I think 400 grit. I bought a sheet of 220grit and went back home. After mounting up the vice I put a 12 gauge brush on my cleaning rod and cut a portion of the paper. The holes make it a perfect match for the bristles on the bore brush, for a tighter fit I put one cleaning patch on the brush then added the paper back.
I oiled up the barrel and went in from the choke end as it is the rough part, the rear is smooth. When I got it in the choke I oiled the rear of the brush up and opened up the big drill.
All told I made 75 passes nice and slow and the marks are just barely visible in the barrel. I am going to go back after it tomorrow and then finish the polish up with steel wool.
For anyone that has a very rough barrel this paper is the real deal.
Good luck with it. I cant wait to see the patterns you get with her now :icon_thumright:
then after you can do this and it will help it dramatically
http://oldgobbler.com/Forum/index.php/topic,182.90.html
As to the earlier question of how does it shoot, this was prior to yesterday's polishing with the sanding paper. I would have to think these numers will only go up as the barrel is much smoother to look at now even without a final polish.
Win HV 3.5" 2oz lead 6's - 130-150
Hevi13 3.5" 2.25oz #6's - 170-180
Hevi13 3.5" 2.25oz #7's - 270-280
Quote from: Tom Foolery on February 05, 2012, 08:09:19 AM
As to the earlier question of how does it shoot, this was prior to yesterday's polishing with the sanding paper. I would have to think these numers will only go up as the barrel is much smoother to look at now even without a final polish.
Win HV 3.5" 2oz lead 6's - 130-150
Hevi13 3.5" 2.25oz #6's - 170-180
Hevi13 3.5" 2.25oz #7's - 270-280
Outstanding! :icon_thumright:
Quote from: Tom Foolery on February 05, 2012, 08:09:19 AM
As to the earlier question of how does it shoot, this was prior to yesterday's polishing with the sanding paper. I would have to think these numers will only go up as the barrel is much smoother to look at now even without a final polish.
Win HV 3.5" 2oz lead 6's - 130-150
Hevi13 3.5" 2.25oz #6's - 170-180
Hevi13 3.5" 2.25oz #7's - 270-280
Those look like very good numbers. It will be interesting to see the numbers when you shoot it under similar conditions with your polished barrel. I look forward to your results.
Thanks,
Clark
I made 100 more passes this morning with the drywall paper loaded on a bore brush. I then made 100 passes with the green stotch-brite pad loaded with polishing compound. The difference to the eye is unreal. While the marks are not gone they are very faint, completely different than before.
Todays weather sucks for patterning, 48 degrees, North wind @ 5-10mph, 100% relative humidty. I still may have to loose one just to see if I have ruined my barrel or not, LOL.
I could not take it so I had to fire a couple rounds. On the best days ever I have cracked 150 just a couple of times with Win HV 3.5" 2oz #6 lead. Today was not the best day.
I shot the other day: 61 degrees, slight wind, 50% humidity and got 134 and 139 in the 10" at 42yds.
Today's weather: 48 degrees, 81% humidity, swirlingish wind 4-6mph.
I fired 2 rounds at 42yds with the Win HV 3.5" 2oz #6's and got 147 and 143 in the 10" at 42yds
So in worse weather my pattern improved after this sanding/polishing adventure. I can't wait until I get some good weather.
I counted up one of the patterns tonight, I must have threw the 147 away.
Win 3.5" HV 2oz #6 lead
10" - 143
16" - 230
20" - 302
I am pretty pleased with the way it shot. :)
Quote from: Tom Foolery on February 06, 2012, 08:35:57 PM
I counted up one of the patterns tonight, I must have threw the 147 away.
Win 3.5" HV 2oz #6 lead
10" - 143
16" - 230
20" - 302
I am pretty pleased with the way it shot. :)
By all means don't take this the wrong way, as I too, tinker with things as well. But isn't it amazing how much time we will spend, tinkering with something we love, when there really isn't anything wrong with it in the first place.
Dead is dead. :TooFunny:
I believe you got yourself a shooter. :icon_thumright:
God Bless,
David B.
Oh yeah I agree completely. There was nothing wrong with the way it shot prior to all this, I just bugged me. Everytime I looked down the barrel after cleaning it I saw those marks and though, those should not be there.
This was all done 100% for me and my OCD. :funnyturkey: