Westerner,
It was right on the shelf next to the pixie dust..!
Private seller, one of those things... Timing..
It was advertised as a 32 Caliber... When it arrived it measured (odd # of grooves)(7)-- about .308 bore and .316-7 grooves.
Now I don't have a anvil type micrometer so I am measuring from a slug, which is only approximate. When I get the chance I'll wrap the slug with a feeler shim and measure more precisely.
What interests me about the rifling is that it, at first glance, looks like Metford rifling. There is a picture on another thread here on ASSRA (i'll find the link and modify this post.)
Looking down the Heptagon (7 sided bore) each land terminates at a groove which makes the lands 'look like' the "flats" on a Metford barrel.
Anyway I have high hopes that the configuration grips the bullet well.
Just for fun I might make a false muzzle out of the excess barrel length.
The Metford Rifles were known for their exceptional accuracy.
I enjoy the non standard aspect of what I think will be a cool experiment, even if it doesn't meet expectations..!
re: Assuming the gain twist is meant for bullets...
Humm, that's interesting... Were they building many small caliber muzzle loaders way back then..?
BTW, there is no information regarding alloy or maker of the barrel
westerner wrote on Feb 2
nd, 2026 at 1:39pm:
Where in blazes did you find a .316 gain twist barrel?
If I owned it, would be a 30 inch barrel using the 8.15X46R case. Assuming the gain twist is meant for bullets...