
I've picked up another older rifle which is going to make a good project. The stock is very good and the barrel also appears quite good for a 40+yr old rifle. It does however appear to have some pitting inside the barrel, around halfway down. I've played around with a good torch light and the rest of the barrel seems good. I've not shot it yet, but we'll see how it goes.
Question is, is there a particular section of the barrel where pitting may occur that is very detrimental to accuracy? A friend who has been around firearms longer than I suggests the bullet should still stabilise fairly well with where the pitting is on this thing. But again putting it on paper will tell us the results.
One interesting thing I found the other night is I gave the inside of the barrel a dam good brush out and followed it up with 2 or 3 rounds of foaming bore cleaner. Lots of patches, and once dry I finished with my best mate Ballistol. The barrel certainly seems much more bright and cleaner and the patch/area of pitting no longer seems protruding. I'll try and grab a borescope if I can, have also thought about those cheapies off Temu that can plug into your phone.