Smooth Twist X Borescope

STO

Member
Sep 30, 2018
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Maine
So if you're like me, you're curious about how things work and you know that looking down a barrel to get an idea of the bore is like trying to pick out a table top by holding your eye parallel to it; something is lost when looking at an oblique angle. So I put a borescope down it. While I was at it, I thought it'd be entertaining to see what loading a pellet from the magazine looked like. 


https://youtu.be/92FeR9U6_Og





So what exactly are you seeing here? Well, this is a .30 caliber Smooth Twist X barrel on an FX Crown. Note that the camera starts rotated approximately 90 degrees clockwise from vertical, and so the brass transfer port actually appears on the right hand side.

0:00 First you see the bolt probe, slowly being retracted, and the magazine indexing a pellet. Note how rapid/violent that is. It really chucks that pellet sideways surprisingly forcefully. No wonder groups shrink when pellets are single loaded as opposed to magazine fed. 

0:13 The pellet starts to be fed forward. Again keep in mind the camera’s rotated perspective. The pellet slowly noses its way forward. 

0:21 The pellet visibly engages the rifling here, showing slight deformation at the points. Notably, this is key to good accuracy on most airguns and firearms, firing the projectile before it has engaged the leade will tend to result in poor accuracy. 

0:36 We’re just examining the bore here. Note this barrel has not been cleaned at all recently, so lead buildup should represent normal use. The majority of the bore appears quite smooth, although far from flawless as there are clear tool marks of some sort at various points. Notable is the leading of the lands, while the grooves appear remarkably untouched. 

1:07 Now we’re at the choke. I would recommend you pause the video here, click the little gear in the bottom right hand corner, and set the playback speed to 0.25 (1/4 normal speed) and watch the whole thing carefully, potentially multiple times. It is VERY interesting. Its significance is difficult to fully discern, but the leading certainly suggests the pellet goes from riding the lands to being constrained by the entire bore in a very short distance. There is also, at least the appearance, of the lands getting wider toward the muzzle within the choke. 

1:14 Out of the bore and into the liner system. Visible here is the liner retention tubular bolt and the inside of the internal shroud brake.

So what all this means is very much subject to interpretation. There is a great deal of speculation regarding the Smooth Twist and Smooth Twist X systems, how they are similar to and different from conventional rifling, etc. So here it is, a solid video showing a peek behind the curtain of what exactly is in the bore. Hopefully it is interesting, if not otherwise useful. If anyone has any questions I'm happy to try and answer them as best I can. I'm not necessarily an expert here though, I'm just a dude with a scope. 
 
1:40 according to FX:

1567091884_19883806465d67ecac602888.51531181_FX-STX-Barrel-Liner-Twist-Rates.jpg

 
It is a tack driver. In fact I finally ran down the cause of my oddly wandering POI on this rifle. It'd be very accurate every shooting session, albeit a bit hold sensitive, but next time I'd take it out the POI would seem like it had moved. Apparently the muzzle brake inside the shroud wasn't torqued properly from the factory. So, in short, yes it is quite accurate.

Funny enough, lots of people say that these STX barrels don't need to be cleaned. When I got my .22 Crown it had a real leading problem. After 100 rounds or so the accuracy would have substantially degraded. I was pulling my hair out trying to figure out what was causing it. Finally I read all these accounts of JB Bore paste doing some kind of magic, and while incredibly skeptical, I figured the hell with it if I was about to toss the whole barrel why not just give it a try? One treatment seemed to improve things, so I did another. Then I ended up doing a shedload, like 1K rounds worth, of moderator testing. I didn't bother cleaning the barrel at all during that, because what'd be the point? When I came out the other side of that I wanted to see just how badly the gun was shooting with all that lead buildup having run unwashed JSBs right out of the tin. Funny enough, the gun was shooting better than it ever had before, so I didn't clean it and just kept shooting. That was a couple tins of pellets ago. Just the other day I was out at a little over 100 yards and I've got a steel bullseye target with a 2" bull. It was a beautiful summer day with gentle breezes sweeping randomly around. I popped an 18 round mag in and put 17 out of those 18 shots (these FXs are less accurate shooting out of the mags) into that bullseye. And it is a trite refrain, but I knew I'd pulled that shot which missed before it hit. For a .22 running JSB 18s at over 100 yards in moving air with pellets straight out of the tin and in moving air, that is pretty good in my book. 



My Crown 30 I got really just to do moderator testing. To my eyes the Crown is the best airgun on the market at the moment. It is reasonably priced, especially the VP. It has enough power that it can do everything I want a smallbore airgun to do. It is very convenient to tweak and tune, well set up, but lacks the excessive complexity of the Impact. By the time you stack the necessary programmer on, it is half the cost of a Redwolf. It is a substantially more advanced design than a RAW, and easier to tune. And it is more refined than an Edgun, and a MUCH better host for moderators if building them is your thing. ;) They also tend to have good resale value, so I figured if I got bored of designing mods I could just sell it. So that is why, when I went looking for a moderate power airgun to test moderators on, I picked up this .30 cal Crown VP. I don't have a great love of .30 per se, I shoot airguns for fun so to my eyes the more expensive ammo and greater air consumption is actually counter-productive, as I like the challenge of shooting in moving air. So when the .30 showed up I didn't even bother shooting it for accuracy at all, and I don't think I've EVER cleaned it. Maybe I cleaned it once from the factory? I don't remember. Point is I ran a whole lot of pellets through it before I even put a scope on it. Only fairly recently did I get around to really dialing it in and seeing just how pleasingly accurate it is. So that is probably a stable amount of lead in the bore, it'll pick up new lead and shed old lead but it'll probably always look about like that. And it shoots great like that. *shrug* If I ever have a problem, I'll probably clean it and try JB Bore Paste on it. For now though, why bother with what isn't broken? 


I realize that was probably more answer than you wanted, but there it is. 
 
Neat video, kinda like cheating but I kept watching, haha. Could you film it again with a single shot loader used? I don't know that there would be that much difference. I normally single load personally too. Has the brass transfer port been opened up any? You can see the pellet tip down into it but it looked like it traveled across it very smoothly. Thanks for taking the time and sharing this.

Jimmy
 
The tool marks can only be from the manufacture of the plain tube, my gunsmith said the finish when rodding a pellet through was very juddery!

Presumably the crimping is done in one go for the whole length of the liner, perhaps slight variations in pressure over the length cause slight variations in the compressed size of the bore?