First, thank you OP for asking the same question I had. Second, thank all of the great members of this forum for offering sound advice. My .223 used to shoot 0.5" MOA on a good day with good ammo if I was doing my part. Now I can barely keep groups under 2". I was using Hoppes #9 and following some internet information about how to clean. It was on YouTube, so it must be true. Then I started to wonder about Copper fouling, and I bought some Bore Tech Cu2. The blue-colored patches never stop. I feel like I could scrub for 10 hours and still would not get all of the copper. I suspect that my bore is severely fouled, and I worry that scrubbing endlessly with a bronze brush will actually cause damage, so I have been using a nylon brush. I get the impression that most responses to this post actually recommend the bronze brush and aggressive solvents. Never heard of hard carbon, but there's a good chance I have that too. Can someone elaborate on how/why this hard carbon forms?
First, thank you OP for asking the same question I had. Second, thank all of the great members of this forum for offering sound advice. My .223 used to shoot 0.5" MOA on a good day with good ammo if I was doing my part. Now I can barely keep groups under 2". I was using Hoppes #9 and following some internet information about how to clean. It was on YouTube, so it must be true. Then I started to wonder about Copper fouling, and I bought some Bore Tech Cu2. The blue-colored patches never stop. I feel like I could scrub for 10 hours and still would not get all of the copper. I suspect that my bore is severely fouled, and I worry that scrubbing endlessly with a bronze brush will actually cause damage, so I have been using a nylon brush. I get the impression that most responses to this post actually recommend the bronze brush and aggressive solvents. Never heard of hard carbon, but there's a good chance I have that too. Can someone elaborate on how/why this hard carbon forms?
When you run 3-4 soaking patches through what do you put on the patches and do you wipe out before applying wipe out?For most rifles that don't foul a lot, I'll run 3-4 soaking wet patches through bore. Then apply Wipe-Out foam. I wait about 20 minutes as the bubbles dissipate, while I'm loading my gear into the car. Then I reapply the foam, and plug muzzle and breech. I drive home and patch out about 3-4 hours later. That's it. With other barrels I might brush a little to remove hard carbon -- but I rarely shoot more than 70 rounds in one session and the wet patches and WipeOut takes care of that, if applied right after you shoot.
With the Wipe-out, no carbon ring after hundreds of rounds with Varget and H4350.
There are many other ways to clean that may work for you. I know those who believe aggressive bronze brushing works well for them. As a general principle, however, with a really good-shooting barrel, I take the conservative approach. YMMV.
First, thank you OP for asking the same question I had. Second, thank all of the great members of this forum for offering sound advice. My .223 used to shoot 0.5" MOA on a good day with good ammo if I was doing my part. Now I can barely keep groups under 2". I was using Hoppes #9 and following some internet information about how to clean. It was on YouTube, so it must be true. Then I started to wonder about Copper fouling, and I bought some Bore Tech Cu2. The blue-colored patches never stop. I feel like I could scrub for 10 hours and still would not get all of the copper. I suspect that my bore is severely fouled, and I worry that scrubbing endlessly with a bronze brush will actually cause damage, so I have been using a nylon brush. I get the impression that most responses to this post actually recommend the bronze brush and aggressive solvents. Never heard of hard carbon, but there's a good chance I have that too. Can someone elaborate on how/why this hard carbon forms?
Clunker,
To address the copper fouling that your describing I recommend you go to an ammonia based cleaner. Montana Extreme Copper Creme, Sweets, Montana Extreme Copper Killer, are a few that I.ve used with decent success and you can stay with the nylon brushes through some of the process.
Hard Carbon is some tough stuff, it has an almost ceramic or glass like hardness and is a result of repeated layers of powder fouling build up that have been ironed into the bore. The heat generated by powder burning from shooting through a bore that already has some powder residue deposits causes it.
First, I’d address getting the copper fouling out and then after that you can start on the carbon buildup. The use of ISSO pastes or JB bore paste can help you in removing it along with a bronze bristled brush. Also, somewhere in the process it would be a good idea to have the bore looked at with a bore scope to have a good look at what still may remain once you’ve pursued both copper and carbon fouling cleaning regimes.
Once you get it cleaned, I’m sure that it will be a reminder of what time consuming work took place to rectify the situation and hopefully you can be more diligent in future cleaning efforts.
Regards, - Ron -
Keep the Hoppes #9 for aromatic ambiance, because it doens't clean for shit. You've most likely got a ton of copper in there. Hard carbon is just the result of powder combustion that cakes together over time due to high pressure and works itself into a hard compacted mass. It's worse with some powders than others. You really don't want it - and need aggressive solvents or abrasives like JB to get it out.