Okay, lemme try to download some pics of my barrel(s) for you.
I'm pretty computer illiterate so be patient (read old ).View attachment 1301506View attachment 1301507View attachment 1301508View attachment 1301509Compared to what it was, this is spotless!!!
Yeah, pretty much.So I'm a little confused (happens a lot, actually)... Are you saying that these pictures of your barrel were taken after cleaning and it looks similar to when your barrel was new?
I know you may not trust me and thats ok but that barrel is solidly carbon fouled. Your hoppes is not going to clean it. A clean barrel looks like a mirror. Do a search on here for teslong pictures and youll see different types of fouling.My friend, Dave, is the one who turned me on to Hoppe's #9 foaming cleaner.
He has people from all over send him their rifles to develop reloads for their rifle,
so he shoots a lot of rifles every month. He finds what works and creates a spread sheet for
them so they can duplicate the recipe for themselves.
He cleans a lot of rifles and I trust him.
That's awesome!
I disagree, The patches I run through my rifles are caked with carbon.To Dusty's point, Hoppes does not take any hard carbon out.
Even on the softer stuff, BoreTech C4 always take a bunch of carbon out after first thoroughly cleaning with Hoppes.
All that said, if you're happy with the way the rifle shoots, that's essentially all that matters.
By the way, my borescope is a Teslong, I've seen many pictures of "cleaned" bores and some look better thanI know you may not trust me and thats ok but that barrel is solidly carbon fouled. Your hoppes is not going to clean it. A clean barrel looks like a mirror. Do a search on here for teslong pictures and youll see different types of fouling.
Ive only been at it for 30+ but ive had a borescope and looked at multiple barrels daily for maybe 25. That is butchs bore shine, bronze brushes, and iosso on good patches. That barrel is not an anomoly, if you take a look at some of these teslong threads youll see a majority just like that with these cleaner tester type guys. Your barrel would look the same in a few minutes of cleaning like we do around here. Butchs, bronze brush, pro shot patches, iosso and possibly some JB if the carbon is ironed on. A 5 minute soak with a wet butchs patch and a bronze brush would make a huge difference. You got nothing to lose except some carbon if you give it a go. Be sure to let us know how it goes.By the way, my borescope is a Teslong, I've seen many pictures of "cleaned" bores and some look better than
mine and some don't but none have looked as clean as yours not even my friend Dave has bores as clean as yours. He's been doing this for 50+ years.
Ive only been at it for 30+ but ive had a borescope and looked at multiple barrels daily for maybe 25. That is butchs bore shine, bronze brushes, and iosso on good patches. That barrel is not an anomoly, if you take a look at some of these teslong threads youll see a majority just like that with these cleaner tester type guys. Your barrel would look the same in a few minutes of cleaning like we do around here. Butchs, bronze brush, pro shot patches, iosso and possibly some JB if the carbon is ironed on. A 5 minute soak with a wet butchs patch and a bronze brush would make a huge difference. You got nothing to lose except some carbon if you give it a go. Be sure to let us know how it goes.
Could you do me a favor and provide a detailed list of the products you described in your post?Ive only been at it for 30+ but ive had a borescope and looked at multiple barrels daily for maybe 25. That is butchs bore shine, bronze brushes, and iosso on good patches. That barrel is not an anomoly, if you take a look at some of these teslong threads youll see a majority just like that with these cleaner tester type guys. Your barrel would look the same in a few minutes of cleaning like we do around here. Butchs, bronze brush, pro shot patches, iosso and possibly some JB if the carbon is ironed on. A 5 minute soak with a wet butchs patch and a bronze brush would make a huge difference. You got nothing to lose except some carbon if you give it a go. Be sure to let us know how it goes.
Im glad you were able to get more out of it. Thats why we’re here. No sir its not necessary to clean barrels as clean as we do. Its best to see where your accuracy falls off and keep it in the acceptable range. Sometimes ill clean a barrel for a week- run a patch thru one nite, another the next nite maybe some brushing, maybe try a new product and patch it out the next day to see how it did, etc. Of course i think you need a bit of everything because you never know whats going to work with the particular fouling you have at the time. At a minimum i recommend a bottle of butch’s bore shine, some montana extreme 50bmg (for emergency use only- its rough), some real good bronze brushes (i like to make sure they are brass core and are looped on the end not cut), a damn good bore guide (not a universal one you need one for your action AND cartridge- not just caliber, and with o-ring seal), good cotton flannel patches- i use pro shot. I use 1.75”sq and a 22 pierce type jag for a 6mm. You can adjust accordingly. I use a 2” round and a 30cal jag for 30cal. After that id get a toothpaste tube of flitz polish, one of iosso, and a jar of JB non embedding bore cleaner with the blue label and a jar of the red label. I use a 45cal bore mop to dry the chamber after cleaning and be sure the bore is pointed slightly down while cleaning. I use custom ivy cleaning rods for my BR rifles but use the montana extremes or dewey for everything else. Stay away from the cheap rods without actual bearings and the carbon fiber ones. Always run a dry patch thru if you swap chemicals and i run a patch of carb cleaner thru after cleaning before shooting. Youll see shortly after this post how wrong i am and how theres a better way im sure but this is just my experience actually shooting matches and having to clean between relays, plus a ton of experimenting between matches and on customer barrels getting replaced. Im a firm believer in keeping them spotless. They seem to last longer. The only thing harder than carbon is a diamond so i dont like having it around. Oh, on the abrasives i short stroke them all the way down the barrel. When you have a perfect patch and jag you can feel the carbon so concentrate on those areas and ask a ton of questions. One more thing, neutralize your brushes in a bottle of water after cleaning. The bore cleaner eats them up and use aluminum dewey jags to not get a false copper reading on the patches.Could you do me a favor and provide a detailed list of the products you described in your post?
Butch's?
iosso?
JB?
Any other stuff you use/recommend.
Thanks!
I'm glad to read this as it reflects my (limited) experience.Of course i think you need a bit of everything because you never know whats going to work with the particular fouling you have at the time.
It is good to have you back. When do you sleep?Im glad you were able to get more out of it. Thats why we’re here. No sir its not necessary to clean barrels as clean as we do. Its best to see where your accuracy falls off and keep it in the acceptable range. Sometimes ill clean a barrel for a week- run a patch thru one nite, another the next nite maybe some brushing, maybe try a new product and patch it out the next day to see how it did, etc. Of course i think you need a bit of everything because you never know whats going to work with the particular fouling you have at the time. At a minimum i recommend a bottle of butch’s bore shine, some montana extreme 50bmg (for emergency use only- its rough), some real good bronze brushes (i like to make sure they are brass core and are looped on the end not cut), a damn good bore guide (not a universal one you need one for your action AND cartridge- not just caliber, and with o-ring seal), good cotton flannel patches- i use pro shot. I use 1.75”sq and a 22 pierce type jag for a 6mm. You can adjust accordingly. I use a 2” round and a 30cal jag for 30cal. After that id get a toothpaste tube of flitz polish, one of iosso, and a jar of JB non embedding bore cleaner with the blue label and a jar of the red label. I use a 45cal bore mop to dry the chamber after cleaning and be sure the bore is pointed slightly down while cleaning. I use custom ivy cleaning rods for my BR rifles but use the montana extremes or dewey for everything else. Stay away from the cheap rods without actual bearings and the carbon fiber ones. Always run a dry patch thru if you swap chemicals and i run a patch of carb cleaner thru after cleaning before shooting. Youll see shortly after this post how wrong i am and how theres a better way im sure but this is just my experience actually shooting matches and having to clean between relays, plus a ton of experimenting between matches and on customer barrels getting replaced. Im a firm believer in keeping them spotless. They seem to last longer. The only thing harder than carbon is a diamond so i dont like having it around. Oh, on the abrasives i short stroke them all the way down the barrel. When you have a perfect patch and jag you can feel the carbon so concentrate on those areas and ask a ton of questions. One more thing, neutralize your brushes in a bottle of water after cleaning. The bore cleaner eats them up and use aluminum dewey jags to not get a false copper reading on the patches.
I dontIt is good to have you back. When do you sleep?