Thank you for taking the time to look this stuff up!
Upon additional searching and remembering stuff I came up with:
combustion fully nitrated nitrocellulose -- 2C6H7N3O11 + 9/2O2 > 12CO2 + 3N2 + 7H2O
combustion nitroglycerin -- 2C3H5N3O9 > 6CO2 + 3N2 + 5H2O
No elemental carbon ?? Gradual deterioration results in nitrates.
looking at these combustion reactions I think the primary result or product is gaseous - I still don't know where the "carbon" crud causing all this angst comes from
there has to be some chemist guy who could help us out with this!
continuing on:
like I have mentioned previously, for years I have used a combination of Gunslick Foaming Bore Cleaner and synthetic motor oil. Some of my rifles have had 1000's of rounds fired thru their bores. This PM, in preparation for a rodent shoot involving 800 mile round trip ($130 fuel), $500 motels, $250 meals (gotta eat good for this stuff), $150 ammo (even tiny .20 & .22 bullets & stuff cost $) and $50 incidental (gifts and stuff). All this represents $ - ammo/rifle failure is not an option.
As part of my check list a trip to the range is required. Today was not a good day for firing groups - gusty winds. My usual procedure is to fire 3 rounds @ 200, adjust sights for 300 (max at this range) fire 3 rounds at 300, then fire a 3 shot group at 100. I also did this on May 16. Were my rifle barrels crudded up with whatever and unable to deliver? Was my cleaning regimen adequate? What about other stuff? A 3 shot group at 100 would certainly remove most of the wind aspect. The results were:
View attachment 1106790 View attachment 1106791
The bottom left side bottom target was from a .243 shooting 105 Nosler RDF bullets, we plan to shoot steel out to 1000
The top left side is was from a .22-.250 firing a 75 grain Hornady ELDM bullet (7.7 twist)
The left target is an olde target dating back to 2018 from a 6.5X47 Lapua shooting 120 Amax bullets - fun to shoot steel
This Friday the .20's get a work out.
I plan to continue cleaning rifles using my system. The MSDS info is useful because it ID's hazards & stuff no more than "snake oil". The info in the NIOSH hand book is useful. Apparently, Gunslick has changed their foam recipe from ethanolamine to butyl carbitol - I just bought a small bottle for the trip. The ethanolamine stuff is reactive with copper. My uncle had a PhD in organic chemistry but is dead now and hated guns - no help there!