MrTipUp wrote on Mar 26
th, 2020 at 8:28pm:
Mick B, you're talking now, we're talking back then, when there was a long-held tradition that faceted barrels were somehow "better", which was most commonly interpreted as "more accurate". And as Vall suggests, while ordering a round barrel might have often saved you a bit, it most probably took the experiences of returning WWI soldiers to finally and fully debunk that tradition.
Bill L.
Bill,
Looking at the early WRA catalogs issued
before WRA ever made their agreement with the Browning Bros to acquire what eventually became the 1885 Single Shot rifle, WRA was offering full round, half octagon, and full octagon barrels for their Model 1866, 1873, and 1876 Sporting Rifles.
A full octagon barrel may well have been the most "popular" seller, but no where in the catalogs do I find that WRA therefor provided a statement for any of those models that "the Standard" barrel configuration is the full octagon.
You simply paid the respective price according to your own personal preference and desire.
I do agree with Mick B that the costs of producing full round barrels is less than the costs for producing full octagon barrels... though I would apply it to both back then as well as now.
But the OP's post pertains to the Hepburn rifle, doesn't it.