Boss’
What method do you employ for a carbon ring?
J
I don't get a carbon ring. There may be four or five reasons for this.
1. I use mostly Varget and H4350 at close to max pressures. Get a pretty clean burn, and those ADI powders seem to have an element that goes on the bore surface that's not simply carbon.
3. I am basically drenching the bore in fluid (two applications of Wipe-Out) while barrel is still warm. The Wipe-Out inventor says there is an element which, over time, helps resist fouling.
3. For most barrels I seat into the lands. Perhaps this helps push out carbon, but that's just speculation. I understand in-the-land seating may not be viable for across-the-course type competitions where you may have to remove a loaded round.
4. I don't brush and abrade the throat area, causing carbon to have tiny microscopic anchors to grab.
5. I think the main reason is the
carbon isn't allowed to stick, harden, and solidify. Bore gets flooded within 45 minutes of finishing for the day.
Let me explain what I mean by this, by the example of case-necks. Immediately after I shoot I wipe the carbon off the case-necks with a little Ballistol on a patch. Carbon comes right off instantly -- no effort. A week later I might need to use steel wool.
I also use soaking, dripping wet patches BEFORE the Wipe-out. That gets almost all the black stuff out of the barrel. With Varget, what's on the patches is dark gray with a little greenish brown on it -- same color as the Kernels.
------- I HAVE seen a carbon ring on my ARs when I was shooting surplus ammo, rapid fire, lots of rounds. I put a lot of solvent in there with a mop and then used a bronze brush. But in all honesty, I never really shot the ARs for sub-MOA accuracy.
----------- Brushing Notes ----
I fully understand that brushing, maybe even aggressive brushing, may be required for some barrels. But I always start out very conservative.