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I should have mentioned I clean after 200-250 rounds...Quote: "I run 4-5 patches with copper solvent through the barrel and let it sit for a couple minutes(Any where from 1-5 as I get bored easily). I run a bronze brush about 10 passes. and repeat. Then I run 4-5 patches with some thing for the powder fouling. Brush it a few strokes. I then run a few patches of oil(Kroil) through the barrel. Then a dry patch. Done...... I drag the brush back into the barrel from the muzzle end (some folks shudder at the mere thought of this)."
Honestly, IMHO that is way more work than one really needs to do for a premium custom barrel, unless you are cleaning every 200 rounds or so with a dirty powder. I believe you are wasting cleaning materials, and wasting much of your own valuable time. There are many top F-Class guys who are doing a LOT less brushing than that after 150 rounds.
Two pages and not one mention of Marvel Mystery Oil. Hmmm.
IMO the most important part is to know what is going on inside your barrel during/after cleaning. I tried the "no brush" let the chemicals do the work but after the battle I had with carbon build up in the throat area in my faster 6mms I went back to strong chemicals, brons brushes (not over using them) and a little Iosso every now and then and for now that seems to be working for me.
As for the barrel squeegees, i would just stick with a proper rod, guide and patches.
One thing, there is no way for me to use a foam with a warm barrel. I have a 3+ hour drive to my closest 1,000 yard range so the best I can do is a few patches or brush cleaning before I pack up and the barrel cools completely in transit.
I can do it when I go to a 100 yard range but that will only be for load development and zeroing before I stretch it out.
If there was only one correct method and product to use during cleaning, everybody would be using it by now. You need to do a trial and error test of different methods and products to find out what makes you and your gun barrel happy.
.......It's hard to imagine that works but JB does nothing........
I'm not looking to start a fight.
I'm just curious about the foaming cleaners but there are several I've seen. I haven't looked in to it close enough to tell which are for copper and which are for powder fouling. I don't know for sure if any of them work.
I agree with the bore scope idea and the break in procedure mentioned. The barrel I was talking about took around 13-14 shots with 7-8 cleanings and the 2 or 3 JB bore paste treatments. It is a Criterion button rifled barrel and it looked rough enough after the first cleaning that I used the JB before I took the first shot.
With the KG products, it's kind of a system and easy to tell what bottle does what. I found the copper solvent and powder solvent to work well although I wasn't looking at it with a bore scope, just patches that came out clean, pushed out easy and left a shiny bore behind with no copper as far as I could tell.
So is there anything out there that will make me want to get rid of my brushes?
Is that bore squeegee worth trying to use just to pull out the last of my cleaning chemicals before I put it away?
Will VCIs be enough to protect a fairly dry bore from rust?
I know different people do things different ways but I don't have time for trial and error. It's a lot easier to gather many opinions, research the more popular ones and then pick a way to go.
As noted WipeOut is the only foaming cleaner we recommend.
I haven't tried the Wipeout Foam but do use the Wipe Out Patch Out and Accelerator. I let it soak over night and it cleans the bore pretty good but doesn't get all the hard carbon out in the throat area. That's why I brush and use Iosso. So the foam gets all of the carbon out of the throat area of your barrels?
IMPORTANT: I apply the foam Immediately after shooting -- BEFORE the carbon hardens.