How many foul shots do you take?

KQguy

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 7, 2007
Messages
322
Just curious how many shots you take before your groups settle in.My savage 110fp(factory barrel) seems to take 6-8 shots before it shoots consistant.Does this seem like alot?
 
My factory Tikka 300 seems to take 3 shots, My remington 30-06 seemed to take 5 to 7. Not sure about my savage 22-250
 
Like britz said, depends on the rifle some will settle down after 1-2 some may take 5 or more. In my experience the better the barrel the less fouling shots are needed.
 
I got my wipe-out from sportsman's wharehouse.

My Savage 112 in 300 win takes 5-8 shots to foul and the groups to tighten back up after cleaning.
 
wait a minute...y'all are telling me that after you shoot your gun, you clean it and put it away, then when you take it out again it takes several shots before your gun achieves its accuracy potential again?
 
wait a minute...y'all are telling me that after you shoot your gun, you clean it and put it away, then when you take it out again it takes several shots before your gun achieves its accuracy potential again?


10-4 its called fowling the barrel I use montana extreme in all my rifles my stw takes two shots my swift takes 3
 
Depending on the bullet if i shoot tsx's in my 7 mm STW none loves a clean cold barrel. Accubodns same gun 1-2. My tikka in.270 1-2.
 
wait a minute...y'all are telling me that after you shoot your gun, you clean it and put it away, then when you take it out again it takes several shots before your gun achieves its accuracy potential again?

Yes, exactly.

I'll put 50-70 shot through before cleaning again. I'll wait until the groups start to open back up a bit.

My rifle
Clean barrel=2 MOA
Fouled Barrel=.5-.75 MOA

I used to clean often. When I got the rifle it was just a two inch shooter. Not very happy. Then I had some scope problems and ended up firing 20 rounds at one. Boy was I suprised when the last ten grouped a lot closer than the first ten. I figured it was barrel break in. I cleaned it and put it away.
Next time I shot it, it was back out to 2" until I got a few round through it. Now I'll only clean her when she tells me to.:D
 
hmmmmmmm.....that's interesting. I own one rifle right now and it never shot very well, so I can't say I have much experience with whether or not it shot better when fouled vs. clean. The rifle shot so unpredictably, that it's now at the gunsmith being rebarrelled, trued etc....

I'll apologize now if I'm about to ask an elementary question, but.....

If you find that your gun shoots better when fouled, and you only clean it when you notice your groups starting to open up, why bother with 'breaking-in' a new barrel? I understand that process to be shoot once, and clean and repeat this process for ten rounds, then gradually shoot more rounds between cleanings. At what point is the barrel broken-in? and if a gun will shoot better fouled, why bother?
 
Warning! This thread is more than 17 years ago old.
It's likely that no further discussion is required, in which case we recommend starting a new thread. If however you feel your response is required you can still do so.
Top