Crown barrel

ammo.crafter

New member
Does anyone know of a competent smith in the east central PA area who can either counter bore or crown a Contender 14-inch barrel?
 

rc

New member
No I can't recommend a smith, but I know you can buy a crowning tool and pilot from Midwayusa and probably do it yourself if you are careful. The pilot for your caliber should align the cutter and allow you to dress the crown. I had a local smith put an 11 degree target crown on a marlin 22 mag when he shorted the barrel and it turned out nice.

https://www.midwayusa.com/product/1007273822?pid=684575
 

tangolima

New member
I do that myself. Occasionally the barrel has certain hard coating or surface treatment that would defeat the cutter. Also I found the usual brass crown lapping tool suboptimal. It is softer than steel, so after a few uses grooves are worn on it. I make my own tool with ball bearing and glass marble.

-TL

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JohnKSa

Administrator
Interesting this is about a TC. When I bought my TC Encore .223 barrel, years ago, the crown was really rough.

I recrowned it using a large ball bearing and some sandpaper. I placed the sandpaper on the muzzle, then pressed the ball bearing down over the bore, pressing the sandpaper into place and pulled the sandpaper up around the ball so I could get a grip on it. Then I pressed and twisted the ball bearing/sandpaper a few times, turned the bore a quarter turn, pressed/twisted it again, turned the bore a quarter turn, and kept that up until the sandpaper quit cutting from wear. Then I moved the paper slightly to use a new section and started again.

When I could see that the paper had cut all around the crown, I went to a finer grade of sandpaper and went through the process again and kept it up until I was happy with the result. The barrel is stainless and after shooting, the muzzle blast made a perfect star pattern on the muzzle and the three shot test group was under half an inch.
 

tangolima

New member
Sandpaper over ball bearing. Sounds like a good idea. I will give it a try next time. I just use JB compound at the moment. Cuts a bit slow and slow is good. I don't turn the tool in circular motion, but rather in a random swiveling motion to even out the wear.

-TL

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JohnKSa

Administrator
Since it's all done by hand, it's important to keep turning the barrel every so often to try to keep things even. If you just turn the ball bearing with the barrel in one position, it's very hard to keep from cutting unevenly.

Also, although I didn't mention it, this will put grit down the bore from the process as the sandpaper wears out. Maybe blow it out first, then run one or two very loosely fitting patches down the bore, then a tightly fitting one to get all the abrasive waste out of there without causing any damage.
 

tangolima

New member
Good point about the grits. That's why I prefer JB compound to regular lapping compound. I also plug the bore with patches. When done, I just push everything out of the muzzle.

-TL

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