I shoot hi-power rifle matches with an M1, which have A) 10 shots in 10 min, B) 10 shots in 60 sec, C) 10 shots in 70 sec, then D) 20 shots in 20 min. At the end of A, the barrel is pretty hot. At the end of B & C, the barrel is too hot to touch, and at the end of D the barrel is still mighty hot.
Military rifles, even AR's all have handguards on their barrels specifically because they do get so hot. Actually, the guards are a form of insulation, so the barrels actually get hotter than they would without them.
Then, we have our bolt-actions that don't have handguards, so can shed heat more easily. We shoot a couple rounds, let 'em cool a while, then shoot a couple more, etc. We freak out if the barrel gets too hot.
I recently set up a series of 10 .243W loads, increasing by .5 grain of powder between each set of 5. I shot them in random order, at a rate of ½-1 per minute. At the end, the barrel was pretty hot. I found that the group size and velocity varied by charge weight, but there was no discernable influence of the barrel temperature.
In some cases, I split the groups, starting the group with a cool barrel, and finishing it with a hot barrel. The velocities measured at any particular charge weight did not seem to change based on barrel temp.
So, my question(s) are:
How hot do you allow your barrel to get?
Is there really a problem if one allows a modern bolt-action barrel to get hot during longer strings of fire, not necessarily rapid-fire, but say 1/minute?
Does heat affect accuracy in the short or long term?
Will barrel life actually suffer if the barrel is shot hot vs allowing cooling? Or, asked another way, if a rifle's barrel would have had a life of 5000 rounds when shot in very slow fire, would it have a life of <5000 if shot in 1/minute rate?
?
Military rifles, even AR's all have handguards on their barrels specifically because they do get so hot. Actually, the guards are a form of insulation, so the barrels actually get hotter than they would without them.
Then, we have our bolt-actions that don't have handguards, so can shed heat more easily. We shoot a couple rounds, let 'em cool a while, then shoot a couple more, etc. We freak out if the barrel gets too hot.
I recently set up a series of 10 .243W loads, increasing by .5 grain of powder between each set of 5. I shot them in random order, at a rate of ½-1 per minute. At the end, the barrel was pretty hot. I found that the group size and velocity varied by charge weight, but there was no discernable influence of the barrel temperature.
In some cases, I split the groups, starting the group with a cool barrel, and finishing it with a hot barrel. The velocities measured at any particular charge weight did not seem to change based on barrel temp.
So, my question(s) are:
How hot do you allow your barrel to get?
Is there really a problem if one allows a modern bolt-action barrel to get hot during longer strings of fire, not necessarily rapid-fire, but say 1/minute?
Does heat affect accuracy in the short or long term?
Will barrel life actually suffer if the barrel is shot hot vs allowing cooling? Or, asked another way, if a rifle's barrel would have had a life of 5000 rounds when shot in very slow fire, would it have a life of <5000 if shot in 1/minute rate?
?