Some time ago I bought two Ed Rayl barrels from a private party because I had the thought of maybe making a swivel breech some day. The current swivel breech discussion got me thing about the barrels, and how light of gun they could build. And also I'm curious if these are a standard profile barrels or not.
The barrels are stamped RAYL in a small oval at the breech. No other info stamped on the barrels.
They're 42 inches long.
54 cal across the lands.
Have round groove rifling, and have one turn in about 80 inches. Seems a strange twist, but I got about half of turn of a ramrod in 42 inches, and sighting down the bore looks about the same.
The breech is .900".
The waist of the swamp is .725".
And the muzzle is .775".
The barrels look very slender, and are light. Weight seems to be about 2.5 or 3 pounds each.
The guy I bought them from said he'd had a swivel breech mechanism, but had sold it and the breech plugs some time previous.
So since you guys deal with modern made barrels more than I do, can anyone tell me if these are standard profile Rayl barrels? And with that long twist rate, wouldn't you have to shoot it with a pretty hefty powder charge for good accuracy?
Thanks!
John