Great points by everyone on this thread, and one of the best reads in a while. If there is one thing that I am certain of, it is that nothing is certain. I tend to come from the school of going with the bore, and still am with really quality barrels. However. I had a barrel that looked so bad, terrible machining marks down the bore and a super tight, long (2") choke, that I had determined to just throw out. It was a new .25 Crosman barrel, if that even matters to my point. Anyways, I decided to do everything wrong to this 'thing.' I used a drill on a rod and ran a boremop with JB on it, in forward and reverse, so that I would purposely hit both sides, and I did this for quite a while. Then I did it all again with bore brite. Then I finished, going with the bore, by hand with both polishes again. At this point I was just getting some exercise. From everything that I have read the barrel should have been destroyed by this point. I put it back on the gun just to see how much real world damage I did, and it shot (shoots) lights out. I never ordered the TJ barrel and never will at this point. I don't recommend doing this at all, usually, but hey, if you are going to pitch it anyways....
Yes Sir! Nothing lost in a last ditch effort, and your efforts shows exactly what I ham trying to show. I learned this method on barrels that were hopeless and all but one came out stellar! Impossible, but it worked!
One method I will strongly advise against is people using a bronze brush, (often called a brass brush) on a rod and then JB or other type polish put on it.
the grit simply runs around the bristles and does NOTHI
NG the brush would do on its own. And Never-Never use a bronze brush on a polished bore. Even larry Potterfield (Owner of Midway USA advises strongly against it. It will mar the extensive efforts put into a finely polished barrel
For those that do not know my history or name, I am considered one of the finest hard metal polishers and fit and finishers in the field. Not just in the U.S., But world wide. I did it for a living for over 45 years and have won many awards for my fit and finish and helping other professionals and manufacturers attain their goals in the field.
Then I tell you that something works, it works and has been tested over and over again. Most times to excess and exhaustively.
Knife