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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Equipment Discussions
Initial Tubb's Final Finish Report
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<blockquote data-quote="7mmRHB" data-source="post: 117668" data-attributes="member: 3584"><p><strong>Re: Initial Tubb\'s Final Finish Report</strong></p><p></p><p>Roy ,I went to the range this morning with two 300RUMs to do a Tubbs Final Finish break-in. I try to always do two or three at a time to save tons of time. You can always have one gun ready (cooled off) to shoot at all times. It usually only takes me one more hour to do three than just one. </p><p></p><p>I started the process at 6:00 am and had them done by 9:30 . I goofed off spotting shots for grouper who was doing some final load development on a 270 wsm for part of the time.</p><p></p><p>The process worked beautifully as always and both guns cleaned in two patches ,with Coppermelt after the last ten shots.</p><p></p><p>The only thing I would say to you about the sequence you used is that if you shoot ten 3s then you need to shoot ten of the 4s and 5s. It's like sanding wood and progressing with the next grit until you have all the scratches gone before you move to the next finer grit.maybe it will be OK? You could just shoot 5 more of the 4s and 5s before you start your next range session.------Good luck----RHB</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="7mmRHB, post: 117668, member: 3584"] [b]Re: Initial Tubb\'s Final Finish Report[/b] Roy ,I went to the range this morning with two 300RUMs to do a Tubbs Final Finish break-in. I try to always do two or three at a time to save tons of time. You can always have one gun ready (cooled off) to shoot at all times. It usually only takes me one more hour to do three than just one. I started the process at 6:00 am and had them done by 9:30 . I goofed off spotting shots for grouper who was doing some final load development on a 270 wsm for part of the time. The process worked beautifully as always and both guns cleaned in two patches ,with Coppermelt after the last ten shots. The only thing I would say to you about the sequence you used is that if you shoot ten 3s then you need to shoot ten of the 4s and 5s. It’s like sanding wood and progressing with the next grit until you have all the scratches gone before you move to the next finer grit.maybe it will be OK? You could just shoot 5 more of the 4s and 5s before you start your next range session.------Good luck----RHB [/QUOTE]
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Initial Tubb's Final Finish Report
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