• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

Carbon removal test. Barrel Damage Test.

Is there any evidence that the carbon remaining after 'normal' cleaning vs not cleaned affects the accuracy?
 
Is there any evidence that the carbon remaining after 'normal' cleaning vs not cleaned affects the accuracy?

Are you asking about barrel or brass? A little confusion seems to have set upon this thread, which I have corrected in the first post. This was only done to find out which of the barrel cleaners I have work best for cleaning carbon. Instead of a barrel and rearendascope (barrel scope), I used brass. Easy to see and show the results.

I was REALLY wanting to use handgun brass. Wide open and easy to see as well as take a picture of. Unfortunately, I clean my brass to quick when I am done with it and didn't have a single dirty piece. Not even in the scrap pile.
 
excellent info, thanks for testing this. I read about using it on this forum and I have been soaking a nylon brush in CLR and using it in barrel cleaning for the last month or so. It seemed to be working well so thanks for verifying
 
excellent info, thanks for testing this. I read about using it on this forum and I have been soaking a nylon brush in CLR and using it in barrel cleaning for the last month or so. It seemed to be working well so thanks for verifying

I think I am going to plug the muzzle end of a barrel and fill it up. See what happens.
 
I tested CLR in my what I thought was a clean barrel , the white patch came out grayish brown . It was all removed by the second patch . To be safe I dry patched and washed anything that could have been left in the barrel by using Hoppes #9 then again dry patched . Atfer posting this some jumped all over me for using it . It does remove carbon , to be fair I have a SS barrel my bolt is steel and I noticed on the outer shoulder of the bolt face
( Rem.700 ) a discoloration of the steel . I'm guessing some CLR may have been left in the channel for the locking lugs . So with carbon steel barrels remove all traces of CLR . Don't saturated the patch when cleaning your barrel , try a few drops an see , it does remove carbon .
 
Thanks for this Post.
I had a shooting Pal ? lead me back to Old No.9 . I think it just doesn't cut it.
Montana and Shooter works better.
 
I tested CLR in my what I thought was a clean barrel , the white patch came out grayish brown . It was all removed by the second patch . To be safe I dry patched and washed anything that could have been left in the barrel by using Hoppes #9 then again dry patched . Atfer posting this some jumped all over me for using it . It does remove carbon , to be fair I have a SS barrel my bolt is steel and I noticed on the outer shoulder of the bolt face
( Rem.700 ) a discoloration of the steel . I'm guessing some CLR may have been left in the channel for the locking lugs . So with carbon steel barrels remove all traces of CLR . Don't saturated the patch when cleaning your barrel , try a few drops an see , it does remove carbon .
I have been using clr with the same good results. Barlow
 
Thanks #40 fan for taking your time to test the Brass cleaning
 
Are you asking about barrel or brass?

Question was for brass. I think we all know barrels have to be as clean as possible. But is the inside of brass necessarily have to be sqeeky clean? Outside, yes, because of the dies.
 
When talking cases , cleaning in a wet tumbler with SS Pins and Sun detergent and water , cases come out looking brand new inside and out. I wouldn't mess with CLR on my cases . Barrel yes but get it all out , a few drops on a patch is fine , don't saturated the patch could discolor steel if you leave some on the steel. Get your barrel as clean as you can , run a patch with CLR an see what happens , what I thought was clean wasn't . Just get it all out .
 
I don't want to see this thread. I don't want to see this thread. I already have a double lifetime supply of copper, carbon, lead (for 22's) powder and God knows what else, sitting in a large plastic shoe box waiting for each bottle to be used and disposed of. Right now, I am about 7/8ths finished with current bottle of Bore Tech Eliminator. Hopefully, I will be able to report a need to restock before I take a dirt nap.
 
Question was for brass. I think we all know barrels have to be as clean as possible. But is the inside of brass necessarily have to be sqeeky clean? Outside, yes, because of the dies.
If consistency is the most important thing, one would assume 'yes'.
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
166,266
Messages
2,215,204
Members
79,506
Latest member
Hunt99elk
Back
Top