"I’m refurbishing a ML barrel to whatever size it needs to be to come clean end to end. - Rich" ** notes where I go further than just enough to clean up the bore. -Carl
Rich, for whatever it is worth, I use a square "armorer's bit" reamer made from a square file (like Jerry) with a wooden backing, shimmed with typing paper and in the final stages
thinner onion-skin paper (this gives me a mirror-smooth finish, with swarf that is face-powder fine). Reaming from breech to muzzle, once I get a uniformly smooth reamed finish in the entire bore, **I continue to ream but incrementally back down the bore so the end result is a choked bore (larger at breech than at the muzzle) with a mirror finish. Then I proceed to rifle and breech the barrel.
In my younger (strong back, weak mind) days I would do the whole job with a hand brace. Now in my dotage (weak back, weak mind) I switch to a very low speed hand drill when I think the bore is smooth enough that the reamer will not "grab" and scratch the bore. I run a drip of lube (thinned ATF) into the muzzle, which is elevated above the breech. Using a hand brace allows you to develop a feel for how the bit is cutting, whereas the drill is faster/easier but with much less feedback.
Jim Everett's design is much more elegant than my simple reamer, and I may switch to his design if I ever need another reamer.
Regards,
Carl