Has any one tried this for carbon fouling? Here is what Bore Tech says:
http://www.boretech.com/products/chameleon.shtml
http://www.boretech.com/products/chameleon.shtml
From your post I am guessing you don't shot competition. If that is correct you are fine . But if you are a competitor I would frown at waiting until things went south before cleaning. That would be a sure way to not get the results you should want.I have just used the BoreTech C4 Carbon remover for at least 5 years. I am not familiar with all their products but I love it. It cleans out the carbon and leaves some copper so my POI of impact has not changed or will change very little on my first shoots. It all depends what school of thought you come from..... Some old timers (with all due respect) like to clean after every few shots. As for me... I am just getting ready to start shooting after a few shots and will most likely NOT clean my barrel until groups open up or there is any other performance issue. JMO
Yes, it does. That's the purpose of this video. Showing results of using chameleon gel. I would probably had to use chameleon gel multiple times in a row to see the difference. But I won't because of the abrasive factor. I will look for another solvent. Hopefully I won't end up with clr (ha ha).Doesn't that show there's a jinormous amount of carbon left in the grooves in the throat area?
A fellow shooter, whose opinion I respect, told me about Chameleon and how good it did on both carbon and copper.
I tried it with C4 and was not impressed. Then with Eliminator. Much better result which made be think it was the solvent doing the bulk of the work and Chameleon was only a "finisher".
After all is said and done my preference for a bore past to cut carbon is Iosso.
It works the best for me...end up with clr
Yes. Just skip the fore play and get whatever abrasive. You’re gonna end up there eventually anyway. Fast forward to the part where the carbon is gone.Hard carbon might as well be considered as hard as diamonds. Nothing is going to solvent it out without using super harsh chemicals (like berryman chem-dip - I wouldn't have that anywhere near a barrel)
If you need and want the hard stuff out it's going to take something abrasive.