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Originally Posted by
GrantRCanada
IIRC, that was mentioned on one of the other threads I referred to, but a subsequent contribution from a metallurgist indicated that, in the industry, the term "seamless tubing" can simply mean that the product is formed
with a seam, but that it then undergoes a further rolling/burnishing process (internally and externally) to eliminate any roughness or detectable extra thickness along the seam line ....

That's a load of bunk.
From the DG website:
The seamless tempered barrels are made of high-carbon steel (BS970 no. 080M40) and the breeches are threaded.
BS970 no. 080M40 is actually a medium carbon steel (not high carbon like DG states) - it's type 40 carbon with a En number of 8. It IS heat treatable. Typical tensile strength is 700-850 N/mm. In other words, with the proper heat treatment, you can get about 110,000 psi of pressure resistance out of a tube made of this material. Granted, the Indian copies are not designed, treated or proofed for anything even close to that pressure.
There are three classes of manufactured tubing: seamless, as-welded, and drawn-over-mandrel (DOM).
Seamless tubing is produced via extrusion while drawn-over-mandrel tubing is made from cold-drawn electrical-resistance-welded tube that is drawn through a die and over a mandrel to create such characteristics as dependable weld integrity, dimensional accuracy, and high-grade surface finish.
Here's a pretty good primer on how seamless tubing is made:
Making seamless tubing with a floating mandrel mill
Anyone telling you seamless tubing has a welded seam does not understand the first thing about engineering or materials science.
Союз нерушимый республик свободных Сплотила навеки Великая Русь. Да здравствует созданный волей народов Единый, могучий Советский Союз!
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11-22-2007 09:29 PM
# ADS
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Claven2 - I stand corrected! 
Going back to read the other threads, I see that the comments I mentioned were in fact made in relation to DOM tubing (reportedly used in the barrels of some of the cheap Indian-made guns -including this one, it would seem) and did not relate to seamless tubing as I erroneously recalled ...
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