HWooldridge,
Good questions. I was hoping that this post would generate some interest. It's very probable that the accuracy was achieved earlier in the session, however, I wanted to continue the process until the entire bore was affected by the work.
The muzzle had some light corrosion on one side of it, and I wanted to keep going until both the severe chatter marks and the corrosion at the muzzle were lightly lapped.
I did check the accuracy after 20 rounds, and it was dramatically improved over the initial state. Before starting the work, the gun would shoot cast bullets in about 2" at 50 yards. After the first 20 firelapping rounds, the accuracy had been enhanced to 1" at 50 yards. I could have stopped at that point, and would have certainly eroded the throat less if I had.
After the 20 round point, I still had leading in the barrel, and that's one aspect that kept me going. This was a false read, though, as I had used some metal that was provided by a friend. I thought that the ingots were WW, however, they were pure lead. After waterdropping the pure lead, they felt hard, similar to WW metal. Hence the severe leading that I experienced after 20 rounds.
I have looked at alot of 336's over the past few months, and never have I seen one with chatter marks as severe as the ones in my gun (pre-firelapping.) The chatter marks still exist, but they have been smoothed a bit.
I also had corrosion in the first 1/3 of the barrel length. The pits from the corrosion still exist, however, the edges of the pits must have been smoothed dramatically by the fire lapping. I'll not worry about the pitting now, considering the groups that I'm getting from this gun. I fired 60 rounds through it last weekend, and there was absolutely no leading in the barrel. As a matter of fact, my last 5 shot 100-yard group of the day was one of the best, and it measures just a hair under 0.60".
I haven't decided if I will fire lap any of my other guns. I have a stainless M700 in .280 that fouls badly (copper fouling). However, until the barrel is fouled (which usually takes 10 shots or so), the gun groups very nicely. I don't want to erode the throat, so I probably won't do it.
As to your second question, no, I've never tried any finer grit compounds. That might be the way to go on the .280.
I've seen another trick using lapping compound to treat the crown of a gun. A buddy of mine tried this one. He took a glass marble, coated it with the same Clover lapping compound, and rolled the marble on the crown of his barrel until the crown was fully shined. His accuracy on his .22 doubled as the result of his work. It didn't even take him half an hour to accomplish the "recrowning."
Are you thinking of fire lapping a firearm?
The Blade