- Joined
- Jun 12, 2020
- Messages
- 495
- Reaction score
- 712
When shooting patched round ball in a Bess, after about 7000-8000 rounds the bore was eroded enough at the breech that I could either move the patched ball forward (through the use of wads on top of the powder, followed by the patched round ball), deal with torn patches (and gas cutting, and leading of the barrel), or rebarrel. I've seen similar problems in a breech section Curly Gustomski had, and in my own 24 gauge barrel (one of Curly's). My old 11 gauge double has a similar problem, but who knows how many rounds it has seen in the past 150 years.
You'll see a similar thing in rifle barrels, if shot enough (most don't get shot that much, or succumb to neglect before anyone notices). The Dickert I borrowed for some tests a while back had been shortened about 3/4" at the breech when it was converted to percussion. Then it was shot enough the breech end of the barrel was slightly oversized and roughened. Fortunately, the load I was using was enough to move the ball forward of the eroded area, so it didn't affect my tests.
Years ago I re-barreled a target rifle for one of my childhood mentor's grandkids: the erosion at the breech on that one had roughened up the back 2" of the bore. The muzzle was worn from the guide used on the loading rod (stainless steel rod--from Uncle Mike IIRC) and the bore that had originally slugged at .443" was now at .4458-ish inches at the smallest. Viewed through a bore scope the corners of the lands were rounded, particularly back by the breech.
That was one of Bill Large's barrels, and had been sent back to be freshened twice that I recall. Mr. Large died about the same time my old friend had to give up on shooting, so it never made another trip back. I'd have to dig around to see if I still have my notes, but as I recall he had ~12k rounds through it. I replaced it with a Green Mountain barrel, from what little I've seen they seem to take longer to get breech erosion. (Wow, it just hit me. . . at current prices, he'd have to spend >$1500 on the caps alone to shoot that much!)
You'll see a similar thing in rifle barrels, if shot enough (most don't get shot that much, or succumb to neglect before anyone notices). The Dickert I borrowed for some tests a while back had been shortened about 3/4" at the breech when it was converted to percussion. Then it was shot enough the breech end of the barrel was slightly oversized and roughened. Fortunately, the load I was using was enough to move the ball forward of the eroded area, so it didn't affect my tests.
Years ago I re-barreled a target rifle for one of my childhood mentor's grandkids: the erosion at the breech on that one had roughened up the back 2" of the bore. The muzzle was worn from the guide used on the loading rod (stainless steel rod--from Uncle Mike IIRC) and the bore that had originally slugged at .443" was now at .4458-ish inches at the smallest. Viewed through a bore scope the corners of the lands were rounded, particularly back by the breech.
That was one of Bill Large's barrels, and had been sent back to be freshened twice that I recall. Mr. Large died about the same time my old friend had to give up on shooting, so it never made another trip back. I'd have to dig around to see if I still have my notes, but as I recall he had ~12k rounds through it. I replaced it with a Green Mountain barrel, from what little I've seen they seem to take longer to get breech erosion. (Wow, it just hit me. . . at current prices, he'd have to spend >$1500 on the caps alone to shoot that much!)