If the primary form of wear in a barrel is throat erosion, would it be feasible to cut the threads off the back of a barrel, cut a new shoulder and threads, and cut a new chamber deeper in the barrel to refresh it? You would need the outer diameter of the barrel around the chamber to be long enough to recut, and you would not have a brand new barrel, but is this a reasonable assumption? If the throat is by far the fastest means of failure, this would be cutting out the throat and creating a new one.
Not that barrel blanks are necessarily expensive but this would be a pretty notable cost savings if all you're looking at is limited machine work & chambering on one end of the barrel, correct?
Not that barrel blanks are necessarily expensive but this would be a pretty notable cost savings if all you're looking at is limited machine work & chambering on one end of the barrel, correct?