Yeah you like to throw that one around in the lapping post also. Need to get some new ones and watch who you toss them at as some of use know what we know.
Cheaper than 1 brick of BR4's.I love how everyone says “do you own a borescope” like they’re still $700.
You can get a bore scope cheaper than a pound of varget now, sadly.
There is no sense in getting upset about this stuff because there are so many opinions and different experiences. I don't think anyone has the absolute "right" answer to the cleaning issue maybe because there isn't just one right answer. I find these cleaning posts amusing since they always generated heated debates.No, apparently not. Nothing is a problem until it's a problem, is it?
I truly doubt he meant ONE barrel, just the powder and caliber.Anytime you can shoot 50lbs of varget powder and get over 9000 rds of 22-250 through a barrel and get no carbon fouling and no throat erosion maybe you should buy a lottery ticket just 1.
What's your bore look like after that? Any etching?
Fuj is this the stuff you are talking about? https://www.amazon.com/Piston-Kleen...-1-spons&sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZT1zcF9hdGY&psc=1It's citrus based and non corrosive. Bore's are fine on multiple
barrels, after 4 years, since starting using it. Only used it on my
stainless match barrels, and never tried on a typical moly barrel.
I had some gifted brass with hard carbon on the necks that
tumbling did'nt clean up. This stuff cleaned the necks up in
short order with just wiping with a shop towel. Gallon of Piston
Kleen will run you about $50 bucks nowadays. Cheap if you
consider adding up smaller bottles of cleaners.
How did we ever clean rifles and shoot accurately for decades without cheap electronic bore scopes? HmmOf course, if your cleaning is working for you, that's that.
But, if you don't own/use a borescope, you don't know what's going on in the bore with whatever cleaning you're doing.
I wonder too since I am a dinosaur from another age and witnessed some extremely good shooting in the old days by precision target shooters using Hoppe's 9, a bronze brush, and cleaning on a regular cycle. Maybe global warming has changed that simple effective cleaning method that worked in the old days.How did we ever clean rifles and shoot accurately for decades without cheap electronic bore scopes? Hmmlol
I admire your concept of "fun". I have another take on them, they create "stomach acid".Bore scopes are fun to play with and they can show you things, But how many have also seen or read how a bore that looks like hell, shoot super well and nice tight groups.
Only the rifle/bore and your shooting will tell you if your loads, etc. are up to par and doing what you want on grouping on targets or killing game.
If you go back to the old days in short range group (I have no experience in score.) the common practice was to clean after every match, which would typically, but not always, involve less than ten shots. Typically these cleanings would include the use of a bronze brush. Cleaning that often, right after the rifle has been fired. works, but even with that, back when Tony Boyer was shooting T he said that he used IOSSO for every cleaning, just to make sure that he did not have a carbon issue. Before I had a bore scope pretty much all of my 6PPC shooting was with 133 and I cleaned at the range with no more than 25 shots since the last cleaning. I did a lot of brushing with bronze brushes. My solvent was, and still is, Butch's. When I finally got access to a bore scope, I did not see any evidence of cleaning issues. On the other hand, many shooters do not clean that often, nor do they clean immediately after shooting. These are the guys that typically eventually end up with cleaning related accuracy problems that may require the use of something different to solve. Different powders can vary in how difficult cleaning after their use can be. Some, like 133 are relatively clean, while other can be a real nightmare. One reason that I have explored many different cleaning products is so that I can help people that I know solve cleaning problems, that I typically do not have, because I clean more often, and apparently more thoroughly than than they have.I wonder too since I am a dinosaur from another age and witnessed some extremely good shooting in the old days by precision target shooters using Hoppe's 9, a bronze brush, and cleaning on a regular cycle. Maybe global warming has changed that simple effective cleaning method that worked in the old days.
When I read these posts about cleaning, I would like to see the OP state whether there is a performance problem and thus the OP is seeking some remedy, not because the bore looks "dirty" under a bore scope. How does the rifle shoot?
I believe the reason there is so much controversy over this issue is that no one has found a single silver bullet, but some, like me, have found their silver bullet that works for them. Also, the issue has been complicated because today, the image of the bore under a scope has become one of the criteria, if not the main criteria to measure cleaning effectiveness rather than performance on target.
I've a couple of sewer pipe take off barrels that have a whole bunch of carbon in them. I'll check into this when time allows. They are chrome-moly factory barrels so that may or may not show a different result. Either way it still should get the carbon out I should think.It's citrus based and non corrosive. Bore's are fine on multiple
barrels, after 4 years, since starting using it. Only used it on my
stainless match barrels, and never tried on a typical moly barrel.
I had some gifted brass with hard carbon on the necks that
tumbling did'nt clean up. This stuff cleaned the necks up in
short order with just wiping with a shop towel. Gallon of Piston
Kleen will run you about $50 bucks nowadays. Cheap if you
consider adding up smaller bottles of cleaners.
Fuj is this the stuff you are talking about? https://www.amazon.com/Piston-Kleen...-1-spons&sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZT1zcF9hdGY&psc=1
Thank you!Yes Sir !!