Quote:
The hot gasses from the powder will wash away hot steel faster than it will wash away cold steel
Yes, but you're talking a temperature that's red hot before that starts to occur. Steel melts at around 2500 degrees F. and stainless at around 2600.
Here's the recommendations of an "expert" avoiding barrel erosion:
"So the following recommendations may be made to reduce heat checking in a bore, and thus extend barrel life:
1) in extended firing (e.g., highpower and long range competition and prairie dog shooting) keep the barrel warm; keep the number of cool-to-hot-to-cool cycles as low as possible; rack the rifle in the hot sun between relays;
2) if the outer surface of the barrel becomes too hot to touch, cool it down to where it can be handled—this to reduce the nitridation reaction on firing;
3) do not run any coolant down a hot bore: that would give thermal shock and induce cracking;
4) preheat the bore before firing: set the rifle in the sun, run boiling water down the bore, put a heated rod in the rear part of the barrel—anything to raise the temperature of the surface of the throat prior to firing and reduce thermal shock; and:
5) use a rifle configuration that maximizes heat flow from the barrel to the surrounding air: enlarge the barrel channel in a conventionally bedded rifle; use a bedding block set-up that exposes most of the barrel; set a M700 Remington barreled action in one of Sinclair International's ( PS advertizer) new aluminum F-Class stocks; perhaps flute and then stress-relieve (at 1,000 o -1,100 o F) thick match barrels; or other method."
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