Author Topic: Barrel Coning  (Read 2790 times)

Offline B. Hey

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Barrel Coning
« on: June 21, 2010, 06:02:36 AM »
In my recent barrel research, I have noted that a couple well known rifle manufacturers frown on coning their barrels. So much so that they say any guarantee is voided by coning their barrel. Anyone know the reason the manufacturers fell so strongly? I thought coning would have little to no effect on the total performance of a barrel. Thanks for sharing your thoughts/comments. Bill Hey

Offline LRB

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Re: Barrel Coning
« Reply #1 on: June 21, 2010, 02:22:18 PM »
  Most often the coning is done by the buyer, or the buyer has it done by someone else.  Either way the quality of the work is out of the makers hands and controls. If the barrel for some reason does not perform as expected, the buyer may blame the maker, when the problem could be a poor job of cone work. Unless there is a visible fault in the bore of the barrel, the maker would have to take time out to try and find if the problem is the barrel/makers fault, or the cone work. If it were the cone work, the customer may not believe the maker, thus causing hard feelings on both sides, and time lost for the maker. I have heard of few to no complaints from those who have their barrels coned, but I don't see many if any serious target competitors using coned muzzles. I don't shoot competition, but that tells me that I don't want it. To each his own.

BrownBear

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Re: Barrel Coning
« Reply #2 on: June 21, 2010, 07:13:28 PM »
I can see the makers' points, as LRB explained so well.  And it's easy to see that a competitor standing on the range wouldn't need it, or at least not want it.  Why mess with an already great barrel on behalf of "ease" of loading?

But I have to say that for hunting and any other move away from the convenience of a large shooting box and range table, I like coned barrels.  The ones I've done never suffered for it accuracy-wise, but I sure gained in convenience for field shooting.  No mallets for tight balls, much less even a short starter.  One rifle I did had crown problems, and I went with coning rather than paying someone else to cut and recrown the barrel.  Problem solved in about 15 minutes with a hand tool.

Offline B. Hey

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Re: Barrel Coning
« Reply #3 on: June 21, 2010, 09:14:23 PM »
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Enlightenment is always a great experience. Take care ... Bill