JCKelly
45 Cal.
Metal does one interesting thing when heated, and that is, it expands. The colors indicate you got it far hotter than needed to melt lead. The hot side of the barrel expanded more than the other, so it bent a little from the non-uniform heating. In a smoothbore musket I doubt you will ever know the difference, but that barrel is just a little bit bent where it was heated.
Dunno why you worry about its safety. Most new American barrels are made of the very worst steel that can be found. Indian barrels, at least some of them, are made from "seamless" tube. Problem with seamless tubing, any grade of steel, or nickel alloy for that matter, is it can have the worst seams imaginable, starting at the bore.
I have seen this in good ole American 1018 (mild steel) as well as in high nickel alloys.
Yes, I am a P.I.T.A. metallurgist.
Dunno why you worry about its safety. Most new American barrels are made of the very worst steel that can be found. Indian barrels, at least some of them, are made from "seamless" tube. Problem with seamless tubing, any grade of steel, or nickel alloy for that matter, is it can have the worst seams imaginable, starting at the bore.
I have seen this in good ole American 1018 (mild steel) as well as in high nickel alloys.
Yes, I am a P.I.T.A. metallurgist.