Hot freshened, exactly, but I did have to do a fair bit of work on a barrel this winter. When I had test shot it years ago it would just shread patches with burn marks etc. Not good. So I put the rifle aside.
I pulled it out and decided to lap the barrel. When I pulled the breach it looked pretty decent at that end. But the muzzle end showed lots of tooling marks on the lands. So I decided to lap just the bore before lapping the rifling.
I machined my first lap from brass to 0.0005 under bore size, or so I thought. With some abrasive, it would move down the bore but not particularly easily. When it got about 10" from the muzzle it sort of went thunk and stopped solid. It almost seems like when the barrel was made, the bore wasn't reamed all the way to the muzzle before rifling. Ugh.
I spent a couple weeks a bit at a time lapping the lands out through a series of machined plugs, both brass and unhardened steel. When it looked smooth end-to-end with no evidence of constriction anywhere and no remaining tooling marks, I went ahead and coned it enough that one could start a ball by thumb, though not easily. A patched ball will run through the barrel smoothly now.
I've been waiting for a good day to take it out to check the results. Who knows, I might have to work on the rifling as well. The wood is part way through carving and any day I've had has been raining.
Gerald