I don't compete, I shoot hyper velocity 6MM Remington and 223 Remington in a Remington 700 and a Howa 1500 respectively for varmints in terraced farm fields.There were (are?) a lot of folks who bought into the idea that you don't have to clean your barrel when using moly due to some articles that circulated of guys shooting 1,000 rounds when using moly and just running a dry patch down the tube. Personally, I think a normal cleaning regimen is in order, though using moly does extend cleaning if one wishes to do so. The accumulation of copper and, to a lesser degree, carbon buildup - is lessened. But some folks also apply moly WAY thicker than it should be applied (maybe thinking more is better?). if they also subscribe to the "never clean your gun" doctrine - I'd not be a bit surprised to see a barrel not shoot well.
While each rifle bore is in a different state of condition and smoothness, the number of fouling shots differs quite a bit. In two of my rifles, I only fire about three or four. That number of 12 shots I cited is on the outer edge of what might be needed in some rifles with rough bores- probably not the norm with the barrels most guys are using in matches and such.Great testimony here! Thank you: my biggest concern was cleaning. Didn’t know how to go about it: seems like the most consistent way , like you mentioned was to clean…well, till the barrel is clean and then use a dozen or so shots to foul it in and get to work.
And if the moly coating isn't shiny, it is assured there is way too much moly on the bullet.Moly is one of those things that when you apply it, if you think you have enough, you most likely have waaaay too much.
You can't put too much moly on a bullet.And if the moly coating isn't shiny, it is assured there is way too much moly on the bullet.
This is one of the items I meant to address in my lengthy post. There had been a number of folks citing this "fact" as reason to not use moly in the past. I have left moly in the chrome moly barrels of my factory rifles (aside from my stainless-steel tubes) which are most susceptible to corrosion, and I have never seen any rust form in them. And I have always bore-scoped my rifles pretty regularly. I had read the same "reports" and wanted to be sure I didn't have issues. When I apply moly on copper bullets and they sit there for ten+ years with no corrosion in an open-air container, that tells me a lot about how "hygroscopic" the moly is (or isn't). That also goes for loaded ammo, where more electrolysis would be expected between bullet and brass. I encountered far LESS electrolysis with moly coated bullets than bare copper bullets. I have pulled bullets that I had loaded 15 years prior for various reasons and corrosion was not an issue. If moly is hygroscopic, I fail to understand why my findings of having used this stuff for around 20 years says it is not. I live in an environment of average humidity - not a desert. Maybe the folks citing this can take a look at their own unused moly-coated bullets and/or unused moly-coated ammo and inspect it for themselves.Don't forget that Moly is HYGROSCOPIC meaning that it absorbs moisture which in turn , if the firearm isn't cleaned right away, you can get the dreaded rust.
Technically (to a degree) you are right that you can't put "too much" moly on a bullet - it is, however, relative to how much excessive buildup you will want to clean out of your rifle. If you have a brake or tuner, it nice to not have to continuously be cleaning them due to excessive moly build up - and spitting built-up "chunks" of it out a side-discharge brake into the shooter next to you. I remember the sprays that some guys used, spraying coats so heavy that their neck tension changed each application. I do disagree with the degreasing or humidity problem (at least in my experience) When I have dull bullets, it is because I have too much moly in my tumbler. Then, I add more bullets and the bare bullets take on the excess, creating super-shiny bullets with my desired thin coating. I won't say humidity isn't a factor for some folks living in very humid areas, but I'm not in one of those areas. In my experience, when there is an issue with a degreasing problem, the moly does not want to stick either at all or in various spots on a bullet. If the bullet coated entirely and is dull, I'd say that is not an adhesion problem associated with degreasing. There is no benefit to using more moly than is needed to do the job - but to me, there are downsides to using too much - to which others might not even notice.You can't put too much moly on a bullet.
If you're getting an ugly ass matte finish that looks like layers, that's a humidity and/or a degreasing problem.
Some do, some don't, I won't. Pass.....
HBN is probably this era's equivalent to moly. Is it better...maybe... but I don't know.I didn't (years ago) pass. I side-stepped the issue and went on without it. Anyway, I thought that the "moly ship" sailed a while ago and was out of sight over horizon??
Danny
BAM!
Hard to dispute that.![]()
This is one of the items I meant to address in my lengthy post. There had been a number of folks citing this "fact" as reason to not use moly in the past. I have left moly in the chrome moly barrels of my factory rifles (aside from my stainless-steel tubes) which are most susceptible to corrosion, and I have never seen any rust form in them. And I have always bore-scoped my rifles pretty regularly. I had read the same "reports" and wanted to be sure I didn't have issues. When I apply moly on copper bullets and they sit there for ten+ years with no corrosion in an open-air container, that tells me a lot about how "hygroscopic" the moly is (or isn't). That also goes for loaded ammo, where more electrolysis would be expected between bullet and brass. I encountered far LESS electrolysis with moly coated bullets than bare copper bullets. I have pulled bullets that I had loaded 15 years prior for various reasons and corrosion was not an issue. If moly is hygroscopic, I fail to understand why my findings of having used this stuff for around 20 years says it is not. I live in an environment of average humidity - not a desert. Maybe the folks citing this can take a look at their own unused moly-coated bullets and/or unused moly-coated ammo and inspect it for themselves.
I miss those days of being able to call him and discuss load recipes. May he RIPIf that happened, I am pretty sure there was more than moly in that barrel. Like... a lot more.
I have never seen such a thing in 30 years of shooting moly. David Tubb dominated highpower shooting moly for like, a decade. Walt Berger shot moly (as far as I know) right up until he passed away... He seemed pretty smart.
I miss those days of being able to call him and discuss load recipes. May he RIP
