There were also other ways of making barrels which resulted in better barrels, but they were much more complicated and labor intensive. The English made 'twist' barrels by forging straight square rods of 1/2 x 1/4 inch or so and a couple feet long, then heating and bending those into a tube by spiraling them around a mandrel. They did that in sections, starting with thicker rods where the breech would be and ending with thiner at the muzzle. They usually used 4 of those and welded them into one when all were twisted properly.M.D. said:Early barrels were by necessity made round initially because they were forge welded around a mandrel their entire length after being formed in a "U" die from a flat scalp bar.
The also took barrels made from one long skelp welded along the side over a mandrel and twisted them, literally, by fastening handles on them, then heating a section at a time and 'wringing' them the way you wring a wet cloth, ending up with a barrel in which the metal spiraled tightly from end to end.
The French made a thin barrel in the common way, welding a skelp along the edge, then layered on top of that metal which was spiraled around like English twist barrel. Once everything was in place, they heated and welded it all into one piece. The thin liner barrel was mostly removed in the process of boring and reaming.
I don't know if plain octagonal barrels were made this way, but the descriptions include octagon to round ones.
Spence