I'm preparing to do my first barrel swap. Should I apply some type of Anti-Seize compound to the barrel threads before final assembly or is this unnecessary?
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I'm preparing to do my first barrel swap. Should I apply some type of Anti-Seize compound to the barrel threads before final assembly or is this unnecessary?
You’ll get varied recommendations. Receiver and barrel threads are typically not extremely tight tolerance and in a perfect world should not need lube. Be that as it may, I personally use a little gun grease on mine. All it takes is one little sliver of metal off a thread to make life miserable. Found that out on a factory Remington once. Don’t see why a little anti seize wouldn’t work well too.
In the past, I've also used a bit of grease . (Mobil-1 synthetic - My favorite general purpose grease.)
I have read various threads about certain types of anti-seize reacting with this type metal or that, so I never have used it on rifle barrels. For the Savage barrels I have done, I decided to just use the same standard mil-spec grease I have used for AR-15 barrel installations, which is Aeroshell 33MS. I bought a few little containers of it years ago and a little goes a long way. I think about any ol' gun grease will work, and that is what I would use if I did not already have the Aeroshell grease.
Either way. Lube does effect torque values if that is a consideration.
Copper anti-seize.
Never use copper base anti-seize on stainless steel. http://www.depacproducts.net/anti.html
Best is nickel based, second best is aluminum. If you use a grease, stay away from the teflon based stuff, as your barrel may loosen up in use.
i just took apart a 111(steel) at the factory bbl/recvr has a copper based antisieze.
this is a 2018 rifle
Per the above link, Aluminum based is not recommended for carbon steel barrels, so copper, nickel or non-metallic anti-seize is best. But because you can find yourself mounting a stainless barrel into a carbon steel receiver, or vise versa, it might be best to keep nickel based or non-metallic in stock if you're a DIY kind of guy.