New Rifle -What you do before use

I always buy new rifles and follow the same process. Firstly give the barrel a proper clean, a good scrub with bronze brush and fluid then patch until clean, all using a bore guide.

I then do the shoot one, clean barrel for first 10 rounds. Maybe overkill but works for me and never had an issue and all my rifles shoot fine. Having spent plenty on each setup, it is time and money well spent.
Thanks that sounds a sensible approach, did think Tikka may have provided information in paperwork but not obvious if it is
 
My typical procedure with rifles are this . New rifle I run a brass brush with Hoppes on it back and forth about twenty times , then run a couple dry patches through and take to the range . If the guns used I’ll typically follow the same procedure twenty passes wipe out and repeat until I get to about one hundred passes I also use a bore guide in the chamber . I’m color blind so typically I’ll ask someone what color the residue on the dry patch is . If after 100 passes I’m still getting copper I’ll use something along the lines of “Sweets 7.62” but use a nylon brush with this stuff , after I’ve done enough to suit me with Sweets I go back behind the dry patch and swab it out again 10 or 12 strokes to get any Sweets the dry patch may have missed . May sound a bit excessive but it’s worked for me for the last forty or so years .
 
Nothing concerning really, just give it a good clean and go shooting, don’t rag the ar$e out of it for the first few sessions and employ a good cleaning regime that works for you. Factory Tikkas generally shoot very well. It does highlight the fact that even with a new rifle, you dont know how its been looked after/stored between manufacture and sale, or how long thats been. If you opt for a decent barrel fitted by a reputable UK rifle builder your much more likely to get a much better, well looked after product and the results will be quite apparent if you do your bit.
 
I always buy new rifles and follow the same process. Firstly give the barrel a proper clean, a good scrub with bronze brush and fluid then patch until clean, all using a bore guide.

I then do the shoot one, clean barrel for first 10 rounds. Maybe overkill but works for me and never had an issue and all my rifles shoot fine. Having spent plenty on each setup, it is time and money well spent.
I first read something similar on the old Border Barrels website. They advocated filling the barrel with Forrest Bore Foam overnight between each shooting session. It took them over a week to 'run in' a new barrel. Their barrels were 'cut', not hammer forged like Tikkas, of course!
 
I first read something similar on the old Border Barrels website. They advocated filling the barrel with Forrest Bore Foam overnight between each shooting session. It took them over a week to 'run in' a new barrel. Their barrels were 'cut', not hammer forged like Tikkas, of course!
Yes I remember that. Manufacturing always leaves some burr however small so strongly believe in breaking in a new barrel. For an hour of time max and minor cost, why not.
 
Yes I remember that. Manufacturing always leaves some burr however small so strongly believe in breaking in a new barrel. For an hour of time max and minor cost, why not.
From what I remember, it was shoot 1 and clean for about 2 days, then shoot 2 and clean, then shoot 3 and clean, then shoot 5 and clean for a few days. I always thought the patches should be pushed through from the muzzle, because the copper from the bullets would build up on the breech side of any burrs, so more easily pushed off from the muzzle. We all have theories, of course!
 
From what I remember, it was shoot 1 and clean for about 2 days, then shoot 2 and clean, then shoot 3 and clean, then shoot 5 and clean for a few days. I always thought the patches should be pushed through from the muzzle, because the copper from the bullets would build up on the breech side of any burrs, so more easily pushed off from the muzzle. We all have theories, of course!
Barrel makers here in the states will tell you with a brand new “custom barrel” to shoot once clean , shoot twice clean , shoot three clean etc until you get up to I think ten shots then reverse the process until you’re back down to one . That’s 145 shots which to my way of thinking is just 145 shots closer to an eroded throat . I don’t agree with this practice ! I’m of the opinion scrub it out well once at the range shoot a fouler let sit a minute then a three shot group , clean fouler and another group . I’ll follow that procedure through four or five groups and then clean again a fouler and shoot four 3 shot groups of course lettting the barrel cool between groups which equates into 13 rounds clean 13 rounds clean for the duration of the time I own the gun . With a 20 or 22 cal gun I might switch that to fouler two groups and clean with 3 shot groups . If it’s a HB I may go to five shot groups and if that’s the case I’ll shoot a fouler one group clean and repeat . I used to shoot quite often with several shooters who were very much into bench rest 100 and 200 yards . So over time their practices kinda rubbed off on me .
 
A bullet leaves the barrel at the muzzle, so unless those admittedly 'disturbing' fire-cracked-like fishers are at the pointy end rather than just ahead of the freebore you'll probably not experience an accuracy issue.

That said, if it was my new rifle and the marks prove to be other than simply crude and/or congealed lube, I'd be returning it to the RFD with a strongly worded letter.

K
 
If a cut barrel is carefully hand lapped, it won’t need shooting in. A hammer forged does not and is a waste of money and wear. A button pulled barrel is somewhere in between in my view, not worth a big investment, but benefits from a shooting in procedure of at least 20 rounds and cleaning between
 
I take it out the box it came in. Look through the barrel from the breech end to see if the bore is clear and not blocked with anything or needs a clean. Then fit a 'scope to it, put it in a gunslip, take it to a range and shoot it. Adjust the zero, fire a check group of five to confirm the desired zero and then clean it if relevant (so not with and air rifle) and put it away until next needed for use. End of.
 
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