The very first shotgun I ever bought with my own money was a Benelli Nova. They make great guns, but the idea that cryogenic treatment does anything, especially a shotgun, is not exactly held in high regard with the shooting community. I've done some research, and the very best success story I've found is an amateur benchrest shooter who's rifle shooting about .8 MOA, went to .5 MOA after treatment. Color me impressed. The best thing you can say for sure is that a cryogenic treatment won't make it worse (other than your wallet).
I haven't been able to find the video but I once watched a video where a guy put the stock of his gun in a vise, leveling his barrel. He then ran a thin strip of masking tape along the barrel and marked it off in 1" increments. At each mark he placed a thin metal ring like a curtain ring or key ring. He then used a piece of wood to tap the barrel over the stocked portion. After a few taps the rings moved to where the vibration was the most I believe. He reset & did this several times marking where they gathered. This was to determine the best place to install a De-resonator/barrel tuner.
Adding anything to a barrel will change the harmonics as well as shooting different speed/weight bullets & different speed powders ect.
In the old days when setting up a rifle for 100 yard cross stick we tested the rifle with it resting on the sticks every couple of inches out to the muzzle to see where it shot best. When I build a rifle with wedges I like to have each wedge pull out with the same force or as close as I can get. Pinned barrels all have oblong pin holes in the barrel loops to allow for expansion and vibration.
Here I go again. If you have a target rifle,muzzle loader or modern and want to do one thing more beside all of the above their is one more thing for consistent accuracy. Rubber o rings from the auto store from just in front of the fore stock to about a inch from the muzzle. I have on hunting muzzle loader I’ve done this to. Double row of rubber o rings. It is a custom inline i had built for me. Using paper patched bullets it is a one hole gun at 100 yards. Took a deer a couple of years ago at over 200 yards through the neck 3 inches below point of aim. I dont under stand a nay sayer about proven science. If they dont like it or just have fun poo pooing every thing, dont ruin it for the ones who are seeking proven science. With my rifles the only thing I haven’t tried yet is the sonic vibration treatment. Will some day on a pet rifle. Cryogenic treating glass bedding. And making the slots longer on a muzzle loader like was posted here by a member is proven science.
You are the only person I've ever seen say cryogenic barrel treatments help to any real degree. It is anything but proven science. If it were, every barrel maker would do it. Outside of Benelli and Kreiger, nobody else does as far as I know.
I have not seen anything that says Krieger cryo treats barrels. They go to a lot of trouble to buy barrel material already heat treated to their standards. Maybe their suppliers cryo treat as part of their process?
Cryogenic treatment isn't a heat treatment, it is a stress releiver. I know Kreiger used to do it to all their barrels. A quick search shows nothing on their website. Some forum chatter from last year suggests that they may have stopped due to a dispute with another cryogenic treatment company.
I understand what cryo is. Krieger specifies that their source material is stress free so I wonder if the suppliers do that though careful control of the heat treatment process or with cryo. I know the Army did that when making larger gun barrels instead of cryo treatment (at least they did back in the 80's).
Either way, barrel makers know what they are doing. I'm of the opinion sending them off for a cryo treatment is kind of like wearing a belt with suspenders. If it did anything good, they would all do it. Surely nobody thinks putting an O ring on a barrel does anything at all.
Cryo does have legitimate benefits in improve machining characteristics and in cutting tools it appears to improve tooling life. For barrels I've had a bunch done simply because I got them done for free. I had to pay a batch price for work and if I had room I would add a couple of barrels per batch. Results varied from not detectable to noticeably less poi walking on a couple of factory barrels.
Some interesting discussions here http://www.benchrest.com/showthread....-Their-Barrels
Last edited by M-Tecs; 12-16-2020 at 12:50 AM.
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I love nay sayers, where would we be with out them.it would be dull with out them.very dull.
..before anyone casts disparaging remarks, a quick read can help settle a few things ref john krieger and cryo and cryo effects on metalurgy:
"Some makers, like John Krieger, for example, who produces both cut- and button-rifled barrels, have embraced cryogenic stress relieving, but he makes no accuracy claims for it. Others-mostly folks who are not barrel makers but who are in the cryo business, do claim accuracy benefits for freezing the bejesus out of steel. Krieger is convinced that cryo produces a steel that is easier on tools and machines better. Those who use it all agree, of course, and those who don't say it doesn't."
https://www.rifleshootermag.com/edit...unsmith1/83442 "Before cryoing, Krieger told me in a recent conversation, he would often scra p three or four barrels out of 10 because the deep-hole drilling operation would produce blanks having more than .005-inch run-out when turned on centers. It's hard to believe that you can start drilling a hole smack in the middle of a 11⁄4-inch-diameter steel bar and after boring 28-30 inches, actually expect to come out within .005 inch of dead center at the other end!"
https://gundigest.com/gun-reviews/ri...r-custom-rifle “Boring and rifling impose stresses on barrel steel,” Pete Paulin told me many moons ago. “Deep freezing relieves them. During bullet launch, a barrel expands radially and in length. Cryogenic treatment eliminates forces that skew expansion and contraction.”
............hope this helps....
I only question it cause I can't find any reference to cryo on Krieger's web pages. Is he still using it or not? The first article above is dated 2010, the second 2018. The second quote was from 'many moons' before 2018.
Last edited by charlie b; 07-20-2021 at 07:30 PM.
If mine shot any better, I don't know what I'd do with the improvement...if I could even tell the difference.
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If you are shooting offhand, practice will do more good than worrying about barrel harmonics. The Enfields used by both sides during the Civil War out shot the Springfields just because of the way the barrel bands were mounted in the stock. If you look at the way most bayonets are mounted, you will see that they are too loose to help or hurt accuracy much at all. I've watched a few short videos of the NSSA shoots, and don't remember seeing bayonets mounted on a gun on the firing line.
If you like to experiment with that sort of thing there is a great way to see what your barrel is doing. My black powder mentor showed me the following: clean the bore well so any fouling will not affect things, clean the outside well from breech plug to muzzle, load the powder/patched ball, then coat the outside with oil such as Remoil. Finally sprinkle baby powder over the outside as evenly as possible. Insert the cap and then fire the round without touching the barrel. Look closely and you will see a sort of wave form going the whole length of the barrel. Looks neat, take some pictures then clean it all off. What does it mean??? I never figured it out although it does affect where you might want to rest the barrel on a bench rest shot but it makes a great conversation starter at the range!
John
Hmm, should that .696 bore rifled musket be bedded?
And how much powder behind the 800 grain minie would it take for bedding to matter?
I agree - I did a 54cal CVA, glass bedded to a little forward of the lockplate, then it gets two pieces of heavy card under the nosecap - one goes under and up the sides (5 flats) other is just a strip on the bottom flat then a big squeeze to get the (single) wedge pin in.
so the wood is clear of the barrel and its got three solid points of contact with the barrel under tension - interestingly the card under the nosecap did most of the good.
I recently watched a youtube slow-mo video on barrel harmonics which I can't find now. It was of an African dangerous-game rifle, from the bench.
I could see the stock wrist flexing vertically. It was probably flexing horizontally too.
If harmonics matter in a muzzleloader with a 1" octagon barrel, maybe the thin wood through the lock and the wrist is a sizeable part of the picture.
Maybe an extended lollipop tang like on southern mountain rifles would affect accuracy.
Maybe the barrel resting point affects the oscillation of the entire rifle back to the butt. It changes the wavelength if the wrist is flexing.
BP | Bronze Point | IMR | Improved Military Rifle | PTD | Pointed |
BR | Bench Rest | M | Magnum | RN | Round Nose |
BT | Boat Tail | PL | Power-Lokt | SP | Soft Point |
C | Compressed Charge | PR | Primer | SPCL | Soft Point "Core-Lokt" |
HP | Hollow Point | PSPCL | Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" | C.O.L. | Cartridge Overall Length |
PSP | Pointed Soft Point | Spz | Spitzer Point | SBT | Spitzer Boat Tail |
LRN | Lead Round Nose | LWC | Lead Wad Cutter | LSWC | Lead Semi Wad Cutter |
GC | Gas Check |