I bought a like-new, not a rebuild, Mosin Nagant Model 44, Ishevsk arsenal, 1948 date of mfg last weekend. Part of the end of the barrel appeared to have been hit, or ground sometime when it was being made as the Russians blued over it, the crown appeared undamaged, as I know better than to buy a damaged barrel crown on a gun.
Took it to the range and it shot very poorly at first, went at least 12" or more to the right of the point of aim at 50 yards with my best ammo (Czech surplus and Hungarian), it went several feet to the right with the crappy Albanian stuff at 100 yards and it shot inconsistently as well. Put 45 rounds through it on that day and it seemed to really improve toward the end, I just need to allow a 9" windage to the left at 100 yards to put it into the target spot.
During the cleaning process I noticed that the bullet must be getting squeezed near the end of the bore as the copper fowling was accumulating there on one side, the area where the arsenal employee had caused a defect on the outside of the barrel had a small but noticable polishing on the lands and grooves, I think it was getting altered by the bullet putting pressure on that end, but there was little copper accumulation on the defective side, copper fowling only on the undefective part, just polishing of the steel on the defective side of the bore.
I once had a Russian made Makarov pistol that had a poorly machined barrel, put 700 rounds through it and it became very accurate. My question is...will the accumulation of bullets fired through my squeezed defective end of my MN do the trick, fix the problem? I know that a gunsmith can counterbore the end, but I was seeing improvement in accuracy on the first day of shooting it.
Thanks.