I was reading the posts on bending the barrel, and thought I would make a new post so as not to hijack the other.
Bending a barrel brings up a question that doesn't get addressed. I wonder what the stresses are in the barrel once bent, and how that affects accuracy and grouping once the barrel heats? How does it affect harmonics and vibration?
With modern barrel makers (muzzleloader or back-stuffer), they often tout stress relief though heating or freezing to prevent groups walking due to internal metal stresses.
My materials engineering classes says that when you bend a shaft (a barrel in this case), one side will have compression stress, and the opposite side will have tension stresses. Those stresses don't just disappear.
A very sincere question for makers: How many of you have accuracy tested longrifle barrels after being bent? How did they group before and after?
I imagine the shorter and thicker barrels like a Hawken barrel would be less affected. That said, a long thin barrel like a 44" A-Weight might be highly susceptible to stresses.
Not being ugly, but a customer that orders a $4,000+ rifle I would imagine would be unhappy with a barrel bent to get on target. If they are a shooter, and not a "hang it over the fireplace as art" type.
I know old-time makers bent barrels. That was before they had the technology to make long, straight barrels with no runout or bending.
I am thinking that testing a rifle in the white before finishing is not a bad idea. This is coming from someone who bought one inexpensive rifle with bad runout (9" left at 25 yards), and one that was either bent from the factory or in transit to be inlet.
Let's hear some discussion folks.
God Bless, Marc