I recently purchased a Hawkeye Borescope to better evaluate my barrels and cleaning procedures. I have been going through my guns, staring with pistols, and cleaning them. I soon realized none of them were REALLY clean.
The big surprise was my Cooper M21 Varmint extreme in 6mm Remington. This gun has only seen 364 rounds fired, all range testing and not varmint hunting. After removing the copper, which was relatively easy, I have gone to work on carbon. I have used Slip 2000 Carbon Killer, JB Bore Cleaning paste and I still have areas of black deposits which almost look like firecracking. It is not even around the circumference of the bore but is largely in the grooves, but sometimes on the lands. After my initial attempt with Slip 2000, I plugged the chamber and filled the bore and let it soak for more than 30 minutes. I then patched the bore with Kroil and dried it. Much of what I'm seeing is still there. It is hard to believe that this rifle is that bad. The bore finish is good, no surprise there as it is a Cooper. Now I need to get some fresh ideas. Any help here?
The big surprise was my Cooper M21 Varmint extreme in 6mm Remington. This gun has only seen 364 rounds fired, all range testing and not varmint hunting. After removing the copper, which was relatively easy, I have gone to work on carbon. I have used Slip 2000 Carbon Killer, JB Bore Cleaning paste and I still have areas of black deposits which almost look like firecracking. It is not even around the circumference of the bore but is largely in the grooves, but sometimes on the lands. After my initial attempt with Slip 2000, I plugged the chamber and filled the bore and let it soak for more than 30 minutes. I then patched the bore with Kroil and dried it. Much of what I'm seeing is still there. It is hard to believe that this rifle is that bad. The bore finish is good, no surprise there as it is a Cooper. Now I need to get some fresh ideas. Any help here?