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Good advice... JohnFrom my experience, the carbon and copper seem to get layered up. I therefore start with the carbon and patch, soak and repeat until things start cleaning up pretty good. I then switch to copper cleaner and do the same pattern. Once the copper traces are gone, I switch back to carbon if the barrel had a lot of rounds on it and run that cycle once more.
I do not brush a lot, but do use a few passes of a stiff nylon brush once I get things looking pretty clean. That helps speed up the job without running too much crud up and down the barrel.
I am not sure there is a right or wrong, but that's the method I've landed on after many years of trying different things. BTW, I use Boretech for both and think they do a really good job. Especially the Boretech Carbon.
I use the carbon cleaner before the copper removerSo I wouldn't step on the Sweet's thread, I thought I'd start a new one.
If I need to do a real thorough cleaning, and use both copper cleaner, AND carbon cleaner...is there a particular order they should be used in to maximize their efficiency?