Corrosion on crown

Hook'N'Bullet

Well-Known Member
Hello hello,

I've a Tikka T3x for 3 years now. I don't shoot a lot of bullets as it is a stalking rifle. Less than 10 a year. In-between outings, I run an oiled mop down the barrel (stored with mod removed) and then at the end of the season I clean it with oiled patches. No solvents used.

Today I noticed some corrosion on the crown of the rifle. Is this an issue or normal wear? Is this something that could cause a drop in accuracy? I haven't had a problem zeroing. I might not be sub MOA but that's probably user error rather than rifle.

Any tips or advice will be appreciated

IMG_20211102_010014.webp
IMG_20211102_005933.webp
 
All you need is a more frequent oil patch interval after season and perhaps during season and some oil cotton swabs in the threaded area. :tiphat:
 
All you need is a more frequent oil patch interval after season and perhaps during season and some oil cotton swabs in the threaded area. :tiphat:
Thank, it's not actually on any of the rifling. Just on the bit between the two edges. I think it should be okay. If there a way of removing it without removing the blueing? I've heard some fine steel wool works
 
A13052D2-C309-4EFA-8DAA-A48A05BB7794.webp691693FF-F295-4D91-A8FE-CD601B131B5D.webpE4DFBF08-8D90-4C49-8D91-C1D4A5AD3F26.webpI had something similar that reduced an accurate rifle to a nauseating shotgun. The barrel was shortened and rethreaded by Ronin and it is back on form now as the pictures show
 
Hello hello,

I've a Tikka T3x for 3 years now. I don't shoot a lot of bullets as it is a stalking rifle. Less than 10 a year. In-between outings, I run an oiled mop down the barrel (stored with mod removed) and then at the end of the season I clean it with oiled patches. No solvents used.

Today I noticed some corrosion on the crown of the rifle. Is this an issue or normal wear? Is this something that could cause a drop in accuracy? I haven't had a problem zeroing. I might not be sub MOA but that's probably user error rather than rifle.

Any tips or advice will be appreciated

View attachment 228158
View attachment 228157
It certainly looks a bit agricultural. That photo could just as easily be a part off my tractor.
 
I don't use moderators at all, so am inclined to think this can only be residual moisture. With your cleaning method I'd be surprised if rust wasn't also in the rifling too, even if the bore looks bright. Probably too late to fix now, but it wouldn't have happened if the rifle was cleaned every time with a solvent, and then dry-patched. Solvents are actually worse than oil for absorbing water.
Just firing one shot deposits burnt powder and moisture in the barrel. The next shot blasts the fouling out, and promptly replaces it. I've got into the habit of swabbing and brushing the barrel out same day, without fail. Tedious but necessary, as my rifles were very hard to come by. I realise this regime isn't for everyone. ;)
 
I don't use moderators at all, so am inclined to think this can only be residual moisture. With your cleaning method I'd be surprised if rust wasn't also in the rifling too, even if the bore looks bright. Probably too late to fix now, but it wouldn't have happened if the rifle was cleaned every time with a solvent, and then dry-patched. Solvents are actually worse than oil for absorbing water.
Just firing one shot deposits burnt powder and moisture in the barrel. The next shot blasts the fouling out, and promptly replaces it. I've got into the habit of swabbing and brushing the barrel out same day, without fail. Tedious but necessary, as my rifles were very hard to come by. I realise this regime isn't for everyone. ;)
Thanks for the reply, I might use this situation to put an aftermarket barrel and stock on it
 
I wouldn't re-crown unless accuracy is affected. As well as oiling the outside and inside of the barrel, I think it is importance to wipe the forward facing metal. This gets quite dirty when a moderator is fitted and is easy to overlook. If you do that from now onwards, you should be OK.
 
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