cutting and crowning a barrel

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Wv_mingo327

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I’m in need of some help/ guidance. i recently picked up another cva mnt rifle appears to be older kit gun. my concern is the rifles crown or rather a small cluster of pitting about 1/4” directly inside the muzzle, the rest of of barrel is a mirror with no pits of rough spots i have shot the rifle with several different thickness patches as well as different powder charges and while it will group reasonable it just doesn’t group as well as some of my other mnt rifles. my question is do you guys think it could be from the small place near the crown? and will cutting say 1/4” to 5/16” off and re crowning affect the rate of twist? it has a 1/66. i’m comfortable with cutting it my self and crowning as far as doing the work goes or would i be better off to send it to someone and have it professionally done? I tried to get some pics but there not the greatest so i do apologize but you can see the place in barrel i’m referring to as it looks like a ring all the way around but the riffling is still visible all the way to the end of barrel.if for some reason some of the more experienced members feel this is not what’s affecting my groups i will try any suggestions before cutting/crowning.just looking for some help and any input or info will be greatly appreciated.
 

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I would cut and crown that barrel. How a barrel lets go of the projectile is important. If coning it I prefer a much shallower job then I’ve seen done with the Joe tool. The barrel on the left is how I crown a barrel and load without a short starter. The other may work well but you can see the cone doesn’t go deep enough for your issue.
IMG_0421 by Oliver Sudden, on Flickr
 
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Someone did a really poor crown job on that rifle. Also, I can't tell from the pictures what has marked the inside of it. I would say cut and crown also.
 
Someone did a really poor crown job on that rifle. Also, I can't tell from the pictures what has marked the inside of it. I would say cut and crown also.
i was thinking the crown was pore quality compared to my others and the inside is my concern it’s a ring all the way around that’s clusters of pitting it’s no more than 1/4"-5/16” deep in the barrel
 
If you have a lathe with a spider and can coaxially indicate the barrel to where the crown is absolutely perpendicular to the bore I would say go for it.
i would be using a friends shop he’s a machinist by trade but told me up front he’s never messed with anything of this nature but i was more than welcome to bring it over and he would cut it where i wanted so that it was true then i would haft to recrown it myself
 
I would cut and crown that barrel. How a barrel lets go of the projectile is important. If coning it I prefer a much shallower job then I’ve seen done with the Joe tool. The barrel on the left is how I crown a barrel and load without a short starter. The other may work well but you can see the cone doesn’t go deep enough for your issue.
IMG_0421 by Oliver Sudden, on Flickr
I had read somewhere before about some of the coneing tools but was unsure if it would be able to cut deep enough to clear it up it’s no more than 1/4"-5/16" deep into the barrel if i do cut it i wouldn’t haft to even recut the dove tail for the front sight just the barrel and underrib and shorten the ram rod maybe a tad
 
I'd re-crown 1st and see how it shot, as that crown is BAD!

But also, different barrels like different loads ... if you haven't yet tried this method ... you should.

https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/threads/importance-of-‘load-development’-to-find-the-best-group.169960/
i have tried a few different patches an lubes as well as different powder charges i’m shooting pyrodex select threw it and so far a .15 patch and .490 ball give my righted group at 50 yards which is around 3-4 inches but it seems that every 4th to 5th shot it throws a stray flyer that could be anywhere on paper that is my major concern with it. I never thought of it but one could re crown and try it then before cutting the barrel that may clear things right up.
 
would this tool be able to cut deep enough into the barrel cut out the pits without cutting the barrel shorter ?
With Joe's tool you can taper the bore up to 1 3/4" deep. In effect that puts the crown of your muzzle down into the bore. If you go that deep it pretty much takes the rifling out at the end of your barrel.
 
I don't have any pics of my heavy 10 lathe, but I have a similar spider on it. He could pound a bushing over the barrel and grab it in a steady also. With a lathe this will be 101 work.
 
Consider a back bore. I did this on an old lever action unmentionable. Made a world of difference in accuracy. You don't have to worry about the front site dovetail being moved, and the reamer leaves a nice clean recessed crown.
 
I would try the least destructive method first. First clean up the bore - then shoot it if it does not perform well then cone it - then shoot it if it does not perform well then cut and recrown it.
 

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