There really needs to be a hyphen in "stain-less" steal for people like that.
I had to take an extra inch off a barrel for this exact reason, I've learned from my mistake![]()
There really needs to be a hyphen in "stain-less" steal for people like that.
I had to take an extra inch off a barrel for this exact reason, I've learned from my mistake![]()
Same. Stainless rusts just slower. I had to remove and re thread a 223 that had such bad corrosion around the muzzle from the condensation and dissolved carbon because the suppressor was stored on the rifle (a big no no ) It was so bad that we needed a pipe wrench to get the suppressor to turn.
416 SS rusts, grab a magnet & stick it on your barrel, if it sticks, (it will BTW) it is ferrous so it will rust given the chance, 303, 304, 314, 316 etc don't
Contact me for reloading components, brass, projectiles, powder, primers, etc
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Na the 300 series rust as well, badly in some cases but are usually used in food proccessing were salt water/decomposing matter/cleaning acids/galvanic corrosion all come in to play....even where no salt water or cleaning acids poor design can cause bad corrosion of 304 and 316......dont look to hard at fish and chip shops... there saving grace is food is cooked!
But yes they are more corrosion resistant than the 400 series more commonly used in firearm manufacture to get some strength. 316 has the strength of a reheated cheeseburger.
"Hunting and fishing" fucking over licenced firearms owners since ages ago.
308Win One chambering to rule them all.
Contact me for reloading components, brass, projectiles, powder, primers, etc
http://terminatorproducts.co.nz/
http://www.youtube.com/user/Terminat...?feature=guide
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