madsenshooter
01-04-2016, 04:13
Over the past couple days I got the barrel off the parkerized Krag, I had ringed the neck of the chamber shooting cast with a filler called Puf-Lon. Besides that, after the parkerizing wore out of the inside of the barrel, I discovered some pitting from where the guy didn't get the parkerizing solution neutralized inside. The barrel had the square shank, no rounded edge, so it was either original to the 1895 made rifle, or replaced before 1899.
The donor barrel came out of a late 1898 receiver. In addition to the P proof stamp, there is a 5 pointed star that has a little circle of unstamped material in the center, below the P. Though Mallory and others say the star-gauged barrels weren't marked, I find this hard to believe. If they weren't permanently marked in some way, guys would have been selling service grade barrels along with the star-gauged measurement cards! The chamber on this late made barrel is a tad tighter than the old barrel thanks to changes made circa 1899, and I've slugged the bore several times. I come up with .299/.308 at both ends. The crown on this barrel is in better shape that the old one too. Someone had cut a little angle on the inside edge of the crown of the old one. I could rock a bullet put point down in the muzzle back and forth a little in it, not so the new one.
I thought about parkerizing the replacement barrel, but the bluing is in good shape, why wreck it? Surprisingly, at the end of the change, no bubba bumps were to be found on either of the receivers or barrels.
The donor barrel came out of a late 1898 receiver. In addition to the P proof stamp, there is a 5 pointed star that has a little circle of unstamped material in the center, below the P. Though Mallory and others say the star-gauged barrels weren't marked, I find this hard to believe. If they weren't permanently marked in some way, guys would have been selling service grade barrels along with the star-gauged measurement cards! The chamber on this late made barrel is a tad tighter than the old barrel thanks to changes made circa 1899, and I've slugged the bore several times. I come up with .299/.308 at both ends. The crown on this barrel is in better shape that the old one too. Someone had cut a little angle on the inside edge of the crown of the old one. I could rock a bullet put point down in the muzzle back and forth a little in it, not so the new one.
I thought about parkerizing the replacement barrel, but the bluing is in good shape, why wreck it? Surprisingly, at the end of the change, no bubba bumps were to be found on either of the receivers or barrels.