Mike Ezell[/QUOTE] Gene, I agree with everything you said, and have found tuners to be simple and easy to use(except in bad conditions) but I didn't see a direct response to the question. I'm not trying to put you on the spot, just trying to pick YOUR brain a bit as you have done the research. Have you SEEN a difference in tune after shooting several shots(enough to warm the barrel) versus a few shots? I haven't.--Mike Ezell[/QUOTE]
Mike, in answer to your question,
"Have you SEEN a difference in tune after shooting several shots(enough to warm the barrel) versus a few shots?"
Yes; yes I have. Let me explain.
This happened to me a number of times before I realized what was going on.
When I first began using tuners, I would go to the line with a squeaky clean barrel, fire ONE fouler, then a three shot test group. If the test group showed no vertical, I went to the record. So many times before I finished the record group it showed a lot of vertical and I didn't know why; now I do. The squeaky clean barrel had not settled in; before the five shot record group was completed, the rifle was out of tune.
I don't know how many times this happened to me before I finally figured it out. After screwing up the record group, I often went back to the sighter, re-tuned the barrel and then shot a screamer on the sighter.
Bummer!
So, what is the answer to the problem? Simple; don't clean during an agg and don't be too quick to declare the rifle in tune after a thorough cleaning.
Extensive chronographing in the tunnel has shown that a perfectly clean barrel continues accumulating fouling for about eight or ten shots before velocity settles down. If you clean after each relay, you are starting over from scratch every time you go to the line. If you do not clean between relays, you can trust the barrel to deliver consistent velocities and stay in tune.
Sometimes we go to the line and just as the range officer says "Commence Fire" conditions are perfect. If your barrel is already fouled and ready to go, you can go right to the record target and steal a screamer.
But if you have to spend the first three or four minutes fouling and tuning the barrel, the condition will be gone.
The great majority of benchrest shooters believe that you MUST clean your barrel after EVERY group and that if you do not, accuracy will suffer. This is nonsense.
After the first match of the day, the barrel is just settling in to deliver consistent muzzle velocities. If you clean it, you're starting all over again. My normal procedure is to start a five match agg with a clean barrel and I do not clean until that agg is finished.
I realize there are those who are saying, "Beggs, you're crazy!" but I know what I'm talking about and have proven it on the line in competition. At the NBRSA Nationals in Phoenix in 2003, I won the HV Grand with a .1851 agg. I started the agg with a clean barrel and did not clean until the agg was finished. My last group at 200 yards was .228!
Some will ask, "But if I don't clean after every eight to ten shots, won't I hurt my barrel?" No! Absolutely not.
Most shooters do far more harm to their barrels with cleaning than by shooting.
Others will say, "Beggs, I know you think you know what you're talking about but I have seen accuracy go to pot after ten or twelve rounds."
Sure they have because the rifle just happened to be in tune for the first five or six rounds and as it settled in after the ten or twelve rounds, it was out of tune with the load the shooter was using. That's the BIG advantage of using a tuner; you can adjust for an out of tune condition at the line!
Last weekend at the Cactus Classic in Phoenix, I was shooting beside Dee Myers. Ask him how my skeleton stocked rifle, "ol' Bud" was shooting at 200 yards on Sunday.
And on that subject, I must confess to something that most benchresters will regard as an unpardonable sin.
I did not clean my rifle one time the whole two day match.
No, no,, please don't kill me! There is more!
Over coffee and breakfast last week, I told Cecil Tucker and Charles Huckeba about what I had done and invited them over to the shop to examine the barrel with a borescope. There was no copper anywhere and the barrel showed a normal amount of powder fouling which I believe is mostly graphite and other components from the powder coating. I believe this coating provides a barrier between the bullet jacket and bore which helps prevent copper fouling. I suppose this brings up even more questions.
1. What kind of powder were you using? 29 grains of Hodgdon's 322 Extreme.
2. What velocity were you shooting? 3380 to 3400.
3. What cartridge were you using? 6mm Beggs .269 NK.
4. What bullet were you shooting? Tucker 66 grain BT.
5. What primer? Wolf SRM
6. What kind of barrel is it? Old Hart setback with over 4000 rounds thru it.
Now,,, here's what I'm going to do. The barrel has not been touched since returning from Phoenix. Next week, I'll invite Tucker and Huckeba to come to the tunnel as witnesses and using the same load I shot in Phoenix, fire two or three groups to see if the barrel will still shoot.
That ought to be interesting; huh?
Later
Gene Beggs