View Full Version : To Hone or Not to Hone
Mills Morrison
09-29-2012, 08:39 PM
I am restoring a DH 10 gauge which have badly pitted barrels. We had one of the leading gunsmiths look at them and his advice was they were fine to shoot as is and to not hone them. I plan on taking his advice, but I am curious what the group thinks about honing and the safety and performance issues, if there are any.
Dean Romig
09-29-2012, 08:54 PM
The first thing you should do is to wrap a small bunch of Frontier pad around a brass bore brush affixed to a rod mounted in an electric drill. With an ample dousing of Hoppe's swabbed in the bore run the spinning Frontier pad up and down the bore about fifty passes adding more Hoppe's as needs be.
I think you will be amazed at the result. The bores will probably not be as pitted as you once thought.
Frontier pads will NOT remove metal.
Mills Morrison
09-29-2012, 08:57 PM
Thanks Dean. I will try that. They currently look like a Dirt Dauber colony
David Holes
09-29-2012, 11:49 PM
I shoot two badly pitted barrels. They both shoot and pattern nice. They were really hard to clean, is my biggest complaint. I have since run a hone in the 12 guage barrels, and it has helped the cleaning alot.
Mills Morrison
09-30-2012, 02:17 AM
Thanks David. I can see that cleaning would be an issue. I will probably just have a drill set up like Dean suggests
John Campbell
09-30-2012, 08:56 AM
Mills:
A professional inspection is key to the decision to hone. What you think is badly pitted may not actually be. Nonetheless, a light honing will do little harm if the barrel walls are thick enough to take it. But the key to honing is to only take out as much metal as necessary to smooth things up a bit. Many "gunsmiths" simply use a fixed diameter reamer that takes out too much metal in many cases. The result is a smooth bore -- but one that has lost more metal than necessary. If you go the hone route, please check into this with your gunsmith. Or... simply choose someone like Del Grego and the job will get done right.
Best, Kensal
Mills Morrison
09-30-2012, 10:08 AM
Thanks Kensal. All of these responses are helpful.
Paul Plager
09-30-2012, 11:02 AM
Mills, I used Deans cleaning process on both of my 10s. The result is amazing.
They almost look like new bores. Get yourself an old brass rod to use in the drill as they dont like to come apart after use at even low rpm,s caused by the drill.
I used a .45 cal brass brush with a small piece of frontier pad wrapped around it. Bore lube was Corrosion X.:)
Mills Morrison
09-30-2012, 07:37 PM
Thanks Paul. Now I need to convince my wife that it is ok for me to shoot those old barrels
Paul Plager
09-30-2012, 09:04 PM
I'm shooting RST 1 1/8 oz. loads. They kick less than my 12 Vulcan.:shock:
Paul Plager
09-30-2012, 10:23 PM
Mills, remember that if you can't fix it with a hammer, then it's an electrical problem.:whistle:
Justin Julian
10-22-2012, 04:27 PM
I have some of the Brownell's "stainless steel sponge" gun cleaning material. Is that the same material as the Frontier pad? Would it be safe to use to clean the bores?
Paul Plager
10-22-2012, 04:32 PM
Yup Yup. I wind a small piece around a .45 cal brush and chuck it in my Dewalt
cordless, dribble a little gun oil in the bore and spin it up. Just use an old cleaning
rod as they don't like to come apart after being spun by the drill
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