That makes sense. First handful of cleanings, I noticed a lot of fouling. It diminished significantly in the early 20's's. I am pretty certain that the rifle was fired more than a couple times by the time it got to me. When I ran the patch through it, it was FOUL! It was as though it had had a full day at the range and put away dirty. The OCD side of me got pretty twitchy as I hate having my stuff abused by someone else, (I will gladly do it, just don't like others doing it. Weird, I know...). Called the shop I bought it from and he said what he had to say. I guess I believed him as it wasn't worth it to fight that battle. In the end she seems to shoot pretty well and no harm was done.
I cannot dispute your thoughts on hammer forging. In fact after you mentioned it to me, I read a a fair amount on it and concluded you weren't kidding. Once again, I had to find out for myself with the caveat being that should it be a crappy barrel I would get it re-barreled with a quality offering... Convoluted I know... Yet that is how the good Lord made me. I have to work with what I have
Well, and you know as well as I do any jerk on the internet can proclaim themselves a shooting diety.... In that respect, it's VERY wise to research the subject. I do that myself. Mostly just to expand my own understanding. I often speak out of turn, and offer unsolicited advice.... but I mean well, and speak from experience.
The dirty barrel would have been shot. The factory does typcially test fire them, but if the bolt closes, it fires, and it doesn't blow up, they don't care. It's obviously been shot some if it's that dirty, but that may not be a bad thing. Perhaps they've broke it in for you.... There is the rare possibility Remington QC shot it, but they usually keep them in the R&D lab.....
I sent back a Winchester rifle of my cousin's. It was a Classic Model 70 in 270WSM. The bolt handle kept coming loose with recoil, sliding back on the bolt splines. it also wouldn't hold a group to save it's life, and the headspacing was off. The No-go guage would close under the bolt and you couldn't even feel it.... Until you put 3 pieces of Scotch tape on it... roughly .006-.009. That's considerable, if not borderline unsafe..... So it went back, and 8 weeks later, we get the call to come pick it up from my buddy.... There is obviously something wrong, from the tone in his voice. So I show up and he hands me a 270Winchester.... WTH? He just shrugs.... I open the bolt and metal shavings just fall out of it.... The reamed the chamber dry, it appeared, probably just setting a barrel they had sitting there back, and shipped it out.... They couldn't have test fired it or run a go-nogo guage in it. It was impossible due to the large amount of metal shavings.... I traded for a Rem700 in 308. Factory ammo wouldn't chamber in it.... Remington ammo was out of the question, and Federal ammo, only 5-7 out of 20 in a box would close under the bolt without excessive force. The Go guage wouldn't even close under the bolt. I pulled the barrel, set it back two threads and rechambered it with a semi-match reamer, and it shot lights out..... Another Rem700 chambered in 7mmRemMag had the chamber cut crooked. You could fire it, open the bolt, close it back on the fired brass, open it back, rotate the brass 180*, and the bolt wouldn't come anywhere near closing..... (this list can go on for some time....

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Regardless, your rifle has potential. Right now, you can learn from it, and I'm sure it's fine. Then, in a few years, you can save up $650-900 and get a new tube fitted on it, that will REALLY shoot!! And you'll have the experience to shoot it well, and load ammo for it!! Win-Win
I do understand.... I built/paid for it, so if anyone gets the pleasure in treating it rough, it's gonna be me!!
Most if not all firearms are test fired at the plant and are either not cleaned or just given a courtesy swabbing prior to shipping - at least that has been my experience. I never went through a "break in" on either of my ARs. Just shot the darn things. My 16" used to get a thorough cleaning after each day of firing, but I'm lazy and the things are designed for such abuse as neglect in that regard. I think my 16" got cleaned once between the two training classes I took (4 days of shooting, over 2200 rounds). The target that I posted on one of these threads had over 3k rounds down the tube since it's last cleaning and 6 months of sitting. I just gave the bolt and FCG a little lube and took aim. For a good read, and probably the justification for my laziness, read this;
BCM Filthy 14
My press is a cast frame with an aluminum turret, steel (obviously) dies, plastic/polymer powder throw. Even my scales (another reason I should be running a beam scale) are sensitive to the 20* - 30* change. My go/no go gauge is aluminum and COAL attachment for my calipers are aluminum, calipers are steel. So, yeah there are a lot of metal differences that can cause the changes in COAL among other readings in that temperature spread. The powder is not immune to it either. The volume of .1gr of powder is really not that much, especially when you are talking about the size of the cavity to get 23+ grains.
I'm right with you on the sorting of brass, especially for true match ammo. I only go as far as Lake City, and Other. Other is for the lost brass days at ranges where you don't get to keep your brass (wish I had know that at my 3rd class..GRRRRRR) and field days turfing critters (which I have yet to do). Not about to sort through 10k cases examining head stamps for lot/year. When I get down to my MK262 loading, then I'll probably sit with the scales and weigh out the sized, trimmed, and reamed cases to .2gr variance. Which now in retrospect, my ladder loads will be close, but not a true accurate benchmark since those were all new LC brass, and the rest of that lot is somewhere in the 10k as once or twice fired. So long as it still gets at most 3/4 MOA I'll be satisfied. I lack the skills to properly operate a tack driver beyond 200y where very slight changes in grip, cheek weld, eye relief, cant, breathing and trigger pull will make huge changes at range - never mind environmental conditions. I just want to be able to hit a 6" target at 600 on demand.
The cast aluminum is the culprit on the OAL. I've seen the OAL gauges go apes when you start loading in the morning, then in the afternoon, after the room has heated up 40*, it's wayyyyy off!! Add the same amount of factor to your press, only worse, as there's that much more aluminum to move expand.
Be sure to weigh through your brass before you trim the necks and ream the primer pockets, if you can. If you don't, you can't have an accurate estimate of the original case weight, which is directly related to thicknesses in the neck and wall.... You're wasting your time, IMO. You'd be better leaving well enough alone and just sorting through year headstamps!! I've found it's not that hard on rainy days.... Especially when I want/need to sit for a few hours. I just use some buckets, write the year on the inside of the bucket so I can see it, and start chunking according to year!! Left to right, '01-'10 last time I sorted through it... with a few labeled '05-'08 for my IMI brass...

OCD? Maybe.....
