Lol, I assume that is towards me... you should know that there is a box in that picture that isn’t quite 90 degrees to the shelf, so....
No not only you, anyone who needs to take the barrel off to clean it.
Lol, I assume that is towards me... you should know that there is a box in that picture that isn’t quite 90 degrees to the shelf, so....
The only thing with air compressors is to make sure, IMO, that you have a water and oil separator attached inline.During a class at Blackwater years ago we were taught to take the barreled action out of the stock and use an air compressor to blow sand,grit and whatever else before cleaning with a solvent. At the range house they provided compressors just for that. Lots of sand at the range there. Jeff
Same here, in the barrel vise. I might shoot 3 - 4 different barrels in a weekend.I run many barrels on a couple of TL3 actions. I too feel it is easier to clean them with them in the barrel vise vs on the gun. Nothing wrong with cleaning them on the gun if that's how a guy wants to do it.
Makes no difference, clean or not.Wish mine was that clean and orderly.
Sorry this is off topic but is that one of those nice Korean lathes
Sorry this is off topic but is that one of those nice Korean lathes
I’ve put one in a Bio-Circle parts cleaner a few times. It works really well. I don’t recommend going out and buying one since they’re about 2K and up.If you're taking the barrel off to clean it...
Could you totally submerge the barrel in solvent in a tank ?
Or in a ultrasonic cleaner ?
Does it remove the hard carbon and copper?I’ve put one in a Bio-Circle parts cleaner a few times. It works really well. I don’t recommend going out and buying one since they’re about 2K and up.
Not all of the copper, but all the carbon came out with a couple brush strokes. I let some Boretech copper remover soak in it for about 15 minutes and got the rest of it out.Does it remove the hard carbon and copper?