I'm going to stick to the tried and true method. Floors take a beating, especially bowling alley lanes.
Sure, but motorcycle chains have a much harder life than any floor I know.
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I'm going to stick to the tried and true method. Floors take a beating, especially bowling alley lanes.
Your supposed to use a hard wax that will fill in the voids etc.Sure, but motorcycle chains have a much harder life than any floor I know.
I misunderstood. The tapered sulg would act as its own stop.A stop is unnecessary when lapping a choked barrel.
Give it a spin.
Heat? Yes there is a touch, IMHO but there's no fire behind the pellet/slug so.....it's the rapid expansion of the air and any friction from the pellet/slug in the barrel. I doubt the sum is greater than a car hood in the sun....which just gave me a thought, and this could be either a breakthrough or flamingly stupid. AND I'm not sure there is a return from it once applied. Wax is slippery but the ceramic car finishes are even more so, it gets into the pores. But I'm wondering to what end, slightly faster pellet speeds? That we have to slow down, which will save some air, or slightly faster slug speeds saving air. Keeping the barrel cleaner or easier cleaning? IF I had the inclination I'd take one of my spare liners and do a before and after test.Question to you guys that are using some type of wax on your barrels: Is the heat that is generated from a pellet traveling down a barrel high enough to affect the wax coating, as in melting it off? Thanks.
+ one for Renaissance Wax!! Finish line Bicycle chain dry wax for pellets and bore.Renaissance Wax, the best there is.
It has been used for many many years by top curators of irreplaceable collections in fine museums.
Have you ever looked at a gun that has been loved, lubed, put in a safe, and rusted anyway?
The process works something like this;
Almost all lubes whether petroleum or otherwize evaporate over time.
While the gun is "wet" it attracts fine dust.
Next, the lube evaporates leaving a fine layer of dust behind.
Finally the dust attracts moisture, = RUST!
Wax, on the other hand, once dry, REPELS dust, does not evaporate and never attracts moisture.
In the worst case, if you overdo it you would need a good wipedown before use. No harm, no foul!
This is going to be a 1st for me, but I also don't think enough heat will be generated. Especially a pellet that only has 2 very small contacts with the barrel. They are not traveling @ 3200 fps. And then you got the air behind it that may cool things down. I'm not going to worry about it.Question to you guys that are using some type of wax on your barrels: Is the heat that is generated from a pellet traveling down a barrel high enough to affect the wax coating, as in melting it off? Thanks.
Heat? No. You can sit on a bench with a pcp and shoot a hundred shots as fast as you can load and you wont feel any heat on the barrel.Question to you guys that are using some type of wax on your barrels: Is the heat that is generated from a pellet traveling down a barrel high enough to affect the wax coating, as in melting it off? Thanks.
I dont think heat is generated from the air expanding. Heat is generated when its compressed. Its been argued the temp drops. I dont know if it drops temp but I am pretty sure its not generating heat by expanding...it's the rapid expansion of the air
My barrel is 700mm with an epoxied carbon fiber sleeve. So... I don't think it's going in the oven. May use a heat gun on low or just let it sit in the sun for a bit.
For MC chains, the spray wax is for the internal part of a link. The outter part does not roll much in the drive sprockets.Sure, but motorcycle chains have a much harder life than any floor I know.
We use to freak people out when we waxed a new hardwood floor.The point of the heat is to allow the wax to sweat into the pores, burnishing is fine but my results were better with wax flowing.
I get the heat part. Just not using our oven.I can fit an 800mm barrel sideways in the oven and at 200°F, the carbon fiber and epoxy are not in jeopardy.
The point of the heat is to allow the wax to sweat into the pores, burnishing is fine but my results were better with wax flowing.
We use to freak people out when we waxed a new hardwood floor.
We applied the wax then hit it with a torch. Then waxed again and buffed.