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May 11, 2013, 10:17 AM | #1 |
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Barrel heating: the Tikka surprise
I would like to see if someone else had a similar observation.
I bought a Tikka Varmint in .223. Bought it for the smoothest bolt action, ever. (Including Kimber 84, Browning A Bolt, Howa, TC, and forget Savage Moss & Rem). It worked great for the first 15 rounds or so. After that I couldn't hit the cardboard, let alone the target. Another cold start, and it's fine, until the barrel heats up. I carried an ice cooler to the range but eventually traded it, too much hassle. I was a little dismayed knowing the Tikka reputation. Could it be that the steel was hunting grade (carry much, shoot at intervals), not for sports. Or maybe I should no longer wonder why a Sako is double the price for what seems the same action. I got a CZ 527. Regular barrel, not heavy like the Tikka. Gave it 50 rounds in one session. The barrel got sizzling hot. No change in the accuracy, in fact I was able to zero a scope. |
May 11, 2013, 01:04 PM | #2 |
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Most common cause of this problem is the barrel's bearing hard at one place around its shoulder against the receiver face. As the barrel heats up and expands, more pressure's applied at that point and a stress line goes down the barrel bending it.
Sometimes, even with the receiver face squared up but the barrel's not homogenous all over in its steel properties. As it heats up, the metal expands more on one side than the other and the barrel bows away in that direction. In either instance the muzzle axis starts pointing some place other than where it did when the barrel was cold. I'd sent that rifle back to the maker and if its in warranty, they should replace it. All this assumes there's no external pressure being applied in increasing amounts by the shooter through the stock's fore end that touches the barrel and bends it a tiny amount. Such things often happen when someone claims a dollar bill slides easily between the barrel and fore end. A dollar bill's .0045" thick. It doesn't take much pressure on the fore end to bend it at least that much and make it touch the barrel. Most often this is the cause when resting the fore end atop something on a bench top and the shooter bears down on the stock's cheek piece with varying amounts of pressure. |
May 11, 2013, 01:28 PM | #3 |
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Excellent points Bart. It did not cross my mind to check the barrel bearing points. Best I remember it was free floating. The rifle was not on a warranty. I shot from the rest basically one handed while troubleshooting the accuracy.
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May 13, 2013, 12:15 PM | #4 |
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they do make tikkas with thicker barrels and/or fluted
how fast were you shooting? I mean I have fired 50 rounds in one rangetrip but it is not more then one mag then check paper, move to next station that sort of thing |
May 13, 2013, 05:56 PM | #5 |
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Husqvarna, thicker and/or fluted barrels poorly made or improperly fit to actions will still bend when they get hot.
I and others have shot standard weight .308 Win. barrels 24 times in 50 seconds and point of impact did not change at all. But those barrels were well made and fit to actions. |
May 13, 2013, 07:26 PM | #6 |
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If you shoot until the barrel is "sizzling hot", then you are destroying the barrel's throat area and before long, accuracy will be a fond memory.
Never shoot a rifle that you'd like to keep for a while until the barrel gets sizzling hot. If it's too hot for you to grab and hold onto, you've just screwed up. The best bet is to let some time go by in-between shots, with the action open. Personally, I run a bore-snake, wet with Hoppes#9 through the barrel every three shots. - It cleans out some of the crud, and cools the barrel from inside. |
May 14, 2013, 07:39 AM | #7 |
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PVL
You are right. I was zeroing the scope and testing the rifle. And got carried away. That one time. Cleaned it, took back to the range for 3 control shots. She was good. One question though: how does an AR barrel not get screwed from rapid fire? Forgot to mention I've owned an A Bolt, a Steyr, a Savage, a Moss, two Rems, all in 223 or 243. None was heat sensitive like the Tikka. Well it could have been just my Tikka, which may or may not have been the reason why it was sold to me like new. |
May 25, 2013, 03:31 PM | #8 | |
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May 25, 2013, 07:58 PM | #9 |
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OK take me through the firing sequence. Are the shots stringing out in straight line or somewhat straight or is the group becoming a pattern and shooting everywhere?
I have you checked the bore for fouling. If it is a new barrel you could have some bullet jacket build up somewhere that is cutting a groove in bullet jackets coming down the barrel later. If you have access to a bore scope give it a looksee. You can get Sweets bore cleaner or you can make Humpy's White and do the same thing. Go to Ace Tru-Value hardware and get a quart or a gallon of the Janitor's Strength 10% Ammonia. Says it right on the bottle. If you get a quart add 4 ounces of Ivory Dish Detergent. Apply it to bore with wet patch on a plastic jag and place the muzzle on the floor on a paper towel folded square and let the excess flow out. If you have copper build up paper towel will turn purple. Repeat the above and let it sit ten minutes and check it again. If it is purple repeat again and again till the purple stops. Dry bore sell and shoot it again. I have a 22-250 barrel a guy left here that was shot out. I looked at it and saw it was fouled badly. I laid the Humpy's White to it and soaked it for like two hours and get clean,put it on a 03A3 action and first group on paper was under an inch at 100.
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May 25, 2013, 11:38 PM | #10 |
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The rifle is gone now, I traded it. As I remember, groups became patterns wider than a 12" target at 50 yards. I had scrubbed the bore with Hoppe/M Pro 7 products, but no copper solvents. Regardless, I like your simple recipe, and will try it on other barrels. Are you sure 10% ammonia is safe for the bore?
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May 27, 2013, 05:35 PM | #11 |
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Heating a barrel can cause it to warp a bit, but even if it doesn't touch the barrel channel, the barrel whips when fired, so some heavier hunting calibers need at least 1/16" of clearance at all times. Most rifles don't have that much clearance from the factory, some are bearing at some point along the channel.
In this particular case; however, barrel fouling may be the culprit. Barrels are more likely to foul when new, especially if heated too much. |
May 27, 2013, 05:49 PM | #12 |
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It may well be the case. I did not suspect bore fouling at the time, but what happened is consistent with it. The only way to disprove it would be to let the barrel cool off, and then try again. I did not, in part because we had a hot muggy summer, and I was ready to leave the range within an hour.
If it was fouling undetected, I think looking back at it, that's great. Clears the way for another Tikka. I like the action, but I still don't regret letting that one go, because at almost 9 lbs and 24"bbl it was longer and heavier than I needed. Thank you Picher and everyone who opined. This has been a great forum, I am leaving it with a probable answer that I didn't think of myself. |
May 28, 2013, 01:50 AM | #13 | ||
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http://www.tikka.fi/t3models.php?lite_showdata#pagedown Very hard to beat the accuracy and trigger out of the box for anywhere near the price. And you are correct about the action. Add the limbsaver and a light weight scope and quite the nice hiking rifle. Quote:
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May 28, 2013, 06:23 AM | #14 |
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Mine was the varmint heavy barrel model, not t3 lite.
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June 2, 2013, 12:18 PM | #15 |
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Picher says heating a barrel can cause it to warp a bit.
Only if it's not stress relieved correctly, made from sloppy metals or poorly fit to the receiver. And if it's all three, they'll warp a lot more. Most factory barrels are well made and stress relieved; just poorly fit to receivers. |
June 2, 2013, 04:47 PM | #16 |
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I maintain my opinion that factory barrels are prone to barrel warping, or at least expansion lengthwise that may cause POI change, when heated. Your results may vary.
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June 3, 2013, 07:56 AM | #17 |
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Picher, every barrel gets longer and thicker when it heats up. So does any other round bar made of steel.
The reason why most factory barrels "warp" when they're hot is they're not fit to receivers whose face is squared up with the barrel tenon threads. When the barrel and receiver expands from heat, more pressure's applied at the hard contact point and that makes the barrel bend in that axis. I've had three factory barrels that changed point of impact when they heated up but quit after some 'smithing. The receiver face was squared off and set back about .005" then a .005" thick shim washer was put between the barrel and receiver so it would clock in correctly for the extractor to fit the cutout in it. No more walking shot impact as the barrel heated up. Any competant 'smith can do this to most factory bolt action rifles. Arsenals testing 30 caliber and 7.62 match ammo shoot a couple hundred shots per group; each about 20 to 30 seconds apart. Those test barrels get very hot yet still shoot good lots of ammo into 1 MOA at 600 yards; would be under 1/3 MOA at 100 yards. |
September 11, 2017, 09:10 PM | #18 |
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T3 tikka 270 barrel heat decreases accuracy
If I shoot only waiting 1 minute between rounds the barrell gets warm to the touch and my groups open up to 4 or 5 inches or more. If I wait 5 minutes with the chamber open, I shoot 1 inch groups. I'll never buy another tikka or a fluted barrell. Buddy's tikka in 30-06 with a non fluted barrell did same thing. I'm over tikka
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September 12, 2017, 10:18 AM | #19 |
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I think what is being missed here is the way they make barrels in Europe (and mostly the US other than Savage)
Its a hammer forged barrel, Tika and CZ etc I believe to some custom lapping. Hammer forging puts a huge stress points in a barrel. HB barrel should resist that better but not a given. As the gun is advertised as a heavy shooting rapid fire varmint type, it should not do what it did. Warranty of not its always worth contact the mfg to see if they will take it back, some take their reputation seriously. Button rifling also strains barrel and needs stress relief. Cut rifle barrels do not. But there is an art to each method and ways to stress relieve them, its jut never going to be 100% |
September 12, 2017, 10:19 AM | #20 |
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And a side note, good to see Bart B posting again.
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September 12, 2017, 11:19 AM | #21 |
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OP is 4 years old.
Fluting a barrel is purely decoration. Does little otherwise. "...groups open up to 4 or 5 inches..." Barrel is too close to the stock and touches as it heats up. If your stock is wood you can relieve the barrel channel a bit to stop this. Doable with a synthetic. Just easier with wood.
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September 12, 2017, 11:20 AM | #22 | |
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September 12, 2017, 03:15 PM | #23 | |
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Fluting does nothing to improve accuracy. But it does reduce weight without negatively effecting accuracy. Far from pure decorative. The old school method was to turn barrels down to a thinner profile to reduce weight. Despite Bart's theoretical assumption that a thinner barrel will shoot as well as a heavy barrel it just doesn't happen in the real world. The difference isn't usually huge, especially for 3-5 shots, but I've never owned a pencil thin barrel shoot well after 3-5 shots within a minute. Shooting slower, yes. BUT... if a Tikka is shooting that poorly with there is something wrong with the rifle, or shooter. A lot of guys simply can't shoot a 5-6 lb rifle nearly as well as a 7-8 lb rifle. Almost all barrels will open up groups some with multiple shots in a short time. But the OP's problem and Akholland's are extreme. Both of those should go back to the manufacturer. Tikka makes a good rifle, and fluting does nothing to degrade accuracy. But while rare, I guess even Tikka can turn out a bad rifle.
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September 12, 2017, 03:26 PM | #24 | |
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September 12, 2017, 03:32 PM | #25 | |
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You could buy a thinner barrel in the first place. If a thinner barrel is more prone to whip then you have a less accurate (at least going by 5 shots - you might get 3 accurate shots out of it) The only gain is more surface you get faster cooling. That's my opinion and I am sticking with it. You see bench rest shooters with flouted barrels? |
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