Patriotism means to stand by the country. It does not mean to stand by the President... - Theodore Roosevelt, Lincoln and Free Speech, Metropolitan Magazine, Volume 47, Number 6, May 1918.
Every Communist must grasp the truth. Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun. Our principle is that the Party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the Party Mao Zedong, 6 November, 1938 - speech to the Communist Patry of China's sixth Central Committee
Where am I going wrong with this thought process:
I want the best barrel possible to mitigate the following: I have a certain degree of wobble built into me; if I'm using a 2.5moa dot I'm probably dealing with 3moa precision; if I'm shooting a 2moa barrel that potentially stacks up to 5moa. (It doesn't work out to that particular MOA, but you get the idea)
In view of that thought process I want to get the best (accurate) barrel I choose to pay for.
Patriotism means to stand by the country. It does not mean to stand by the President... - Theodore Roosevelt, Lincoln and Free Speech, Metropolitan Magazine, Volume 47, Number 6, May 1918.
Every Communist must grasp the truth. Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun. Our principle is that the Party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the Party Mao Zedong, 6 November, 1938 - speech to the Communist Patry of China's sixth Central Committee
Last edited by MegademiC; 05-05-19 at 21:25.
I don't think that you're wrong. Most people wildly overestimate the importance of sub MOA accuracy and their ability to achieve it.
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Originally Posted by Jaykayyy
I certainly believe this to be true, and one thing I keep hearing that I believe is that a run of stainless barrels is always going to be more consistent than any chrome lined ones. Especially the last part I wholeheartedly believe to be true, given the little I know about how each is made.
However, my question is by how much. Realistically, what are talking. I think most people kind of have the impression that a good stainless barrel is maybe twice as accurate as a good chrome lined one. And in their minds that might be true, but there's a whole lot of dishonesty in how people analyze such things. With their stainless barrels, they'll judge them by the best group they got on the best day using the most badass handloads they've ever stumbled upon in their entire lives. Let's say that best group was just under .5 MOA, and now they're on the internets telling anyone who will listen that brand x is "half MOA all day long." And it never seems to dawn on them that that group was the result of the stars all aligning and some statistical probability thrown in on top of that. Sure, the other four groups they shot that day were closer to 1 MOA, but there was wind towards the end, two had a flyer because a bug flew in their eye...everyone knows how that goes. So they then perform these mental gymnastics to reassure themselves that that once in a lifetime group is somehow representative of what the barrel can do in a vacuum.
But then when it comes time to evaluate the chrome lined barrel, we're just going to fire a bunch of rounds into a target, probably using irons or a red dot, then just kind of extrapolate what the potential accuracy might be. And we're probably not using handloads, and if we are they're not going to be as meticulously dialed in.
What I'm seeing in reality, though, is that most stainless barrels are closer to 1 MOA, and a lot of chrome lined barrels these days can compete with that. I just think the gap, in general, is way closer than most people think it is. Not to mention I'm seeing a lot of what are ostensibly well respected stainless barrels that are very hard pressed to get much below 1.5 MOA with good ammo, so it's not like you're guaranteed anything when you buy what is supposed to be a premium barrel. I mean, maybe at the 700 dollar mark when you're buying a super premium match grade barrel, but certainly not at the 250-400 mark.
I also think some of this, or a lot of it, is coming from industry propaganda. Getting into producing good chrome lined barrels isn't something that boutique manufacturers do lightly, so it's no wonder they're all pushing stainless ones. The blanks are pretty cheap and plentiful. But when it comes to top tier chrome lined AR barrels, a few very large entities absolutely dominate that market.
That's where I'm at in my thinking, as well. If you're not spending upwards of 500 dollars, going with a match profile, and meticulously handloading-and using the barrel for something where small fractions of an inch make all the difference-then the appeal of stainless really starts losing its luster.
That's kind of what I'm seeing as well, although I would argue that lots of what are generally considered to be "good" stainless barrels (won't name names, but I think everyone here probably has a few jump to mind) will fall short of that 1 MOA mark, with many more towards the 1.5 MOA side of things.
But let's say that a good stainless barrel, on average, is .25 MOA better than a good chrome lined one. What does that mean in the real world, with a RECCE style AR? I think the absolute best example of the real world applications for a RECCE style AR are found in Marcus Luttrel's account. So we're talking a fairly large volume of fire at times, which means getting the barrel hot, with intermittent precise shots made at intermediate ranges, and from what is not going to be the most ideal position. You know, we're talking maybe getting a bench rest off a rock or maybe support on a tree or something like that. It's been a long time since I've read the book, but I don't even know if he once used the bipod during that whole thing. Even when he sniped the sentry, I'm wanting to say he didn't. In any case, we're talking something designed to be used in a very dynamic environment.
So if that .25 MOA advantage is what it shakes out to, and I feel like that's being pretty generous, does that make a difference? I mean, at 400 yards, that's a four inch vs. five inch group, and that's in a perfect world where there's no wind, no shooter error, the bore is cold, etc. But in the real world, there's wind, the shooter is tired and scared poopless, the bore is hot, support is crap, targets are moving and shooting back...
Even at its maximum range at around 800 yards, we're still only talking an eight inch vs. ten inch group. And of course wind and all that jazz is even more of a problem pushing it out that far.
There is actually an application for that, extra suspension travel without the 4x4 need, think running around on sand dunes in Baja California...
My PRI built Douglas 16" SS upper is consistently my most accurate against three Noveske SS barrels and one 20" LMT that I don't have much time on yet. The Noveske 16" and 18" medcon and 20" varmint have been meh overall but they work...
It gets me how much people spend on some of those barrels like Noveske. I've built some varmint uppers for people using no name stainless barrels I wouldn't touch with a ten foot pole, then they call and tell me how outrageously accurate they are. Go figure. I'm convinced you have to spend big bucks to get anything noteworthy, unless it's just a fluke, like probably in the neighborhood of 700, but outside that market I'm not sure there's any difference between like a Wilson and a Noveske or something. I've heard that BHW is the best kept secret in the precision barrel world. There's a guy who deals in them who can get you one for maybe like 250, and I've had some competition shooters tell me they're just as good as the big names in match AR barrels. Never had one myself, but I trust the person who told me that. At least he shoots enough to be in a position to know.
Last edited by okie; 05-06-19 at 22:40.
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