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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Gunsmithing
Removing a barrel without marring it (at all)
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<blockquote data-quote="tobnpr" data-source="post: 1929379" data-attributes="member: 68758"><p>Can it be done?</p><p>You bet.</p><p>Would I ever think about guaranteeing it, and being liable if it slips?</p><p>No how, no way, never.</p><p></p><p>ETA: This is a matter of pure economics for me. After pulling the barrel- are you going to give the same smith the job of rebarreling it? Maybe then, it would be worth the economic risk of eating a hot blue job if something went south.</p><p>But, the idea of making, oh, I dunno- maybe $30-$40 to pull a barrel, and assume that risk, would be idiocy for me.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tobnpr, post: 1929379, member: 68758"] Can it be done? You bet. Would I ever think about guaranteeing it, and being liable if it slips? No how, no way, never. ETA: This is a matter of pure economics for me. After pulling the barrel- are you going to give the same smith the job of rebarreling it? Maybe then, it would be worth the economic risk of eating a hot blue job if something went south. But, the idea of making, oh, I dunno- maybe $30-$40 to pull a barrel, and assume that risk, would be idiocy for me. [/QUOTE]
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Removing a barrel without marring it (at all)
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