I have an H&K USP40. That pistol bore is indeed polygonal in cross section, that is, the circumference of the bore is a series of flat sides.
I keep hearing about Glocks and polygonal rifling. I sit here holding the barrel of my Glock 17, gazing down the bore. It is rifled in a more or less conventional manner. The only thing non conventional being the grooves are wider than the lands. (My impression is that lands and grooves are generally equal; I could be wrong.) At any rate, this barrel is not polygonal in cross section.
My Glock is a departmental issue. I must confess to not checking many other pistols, but the two or three I have seen (all from the same manufacturing run by serial number) are conventional. I do not understand how some would be rifled and some polygonal unless the barrels were made by different sub contractors?
Or does Glock have it's own definition of "polygonal"? (Like a liberal's definition of "progress".)
Trivia question: Does anyone know about "Lancaster" rifling and why it is so odd?
I keep hearing about Glocks and polygonal rifling. I sit here holding the barrel of my Glock 17, gazing down the bore. It is rifled in a more or less conventional manner. The only thing non conventional being the grooves are wider than the lands. (My impression is that lands and grooves are generally equal; I could be wrong.) At any rate, this barrel is not polygonal in cross section.
My Glock is a departmental issue. I must confess to not checking many other pistols, but the two or three I have seen (all from the same manufacturing run by serial number) are conventional. I do not understand how some would be rifled and some polygonal unless the barrels were made by different sub contractors?
Or does Glock have it's own definition of "polygonal"? (Like a liberal's definition of "progress".)
Trivia question: Does anyone know about "Lancaster" rifling and why it is so odd?