I think it’s good information to know which solvents do or don’t.I agree. Just annoys me that 'any common copper solvent will instantly turn a patch blue'.
Clearly not.
2 year bottle of Sweets 7.62 verses 12 year old Red Breast Irish.
I did'nt bother with the Irish since the Sweets worked as it always
has. Sure looks blue to me ?? Where'd I set my glass ??
“Should have gone to Spec Savers…”2 year bottle of Sweets 7.62 verses 12 year old Red Breast Irish.
I did'nt bother with the Irish since the Sweets worked as it always
has. Sure looks blue to me ?? Where'd I set my glass ??
I don't have a specific analysis for them, but that's why I tried 2 different ones. I was paying no attention to anything but caliber when I bought them and months apart.Arguments aside.. Jags/Brushes are consumables. Just get the ones that dont dissolve.
@DShortt - Are you certain the jags you're testing aren't a brass looking aluminum alloy?
I noticed that the brush looks decidedly copper. I use these. Not sure if that matters.This took about 5 seconds.
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Why? The narrative is a bronze jag will instantly show a false positive with any common copper solvent. I questioned that.If you really want to party, ago on mcmaster and order some honest to goodness brass and copper. Then repeat your test.
Exact same brushes I use… and they turn blue before I can finish patching out my barrel. It takes brake cleaner to get it off of them.I noticed that the brush looks decidedly copper. I use these. Not sure if that matters.
As for jags, I just picked them up here and there when needed.
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Try your test with a bullet on a paper towel with difference solvents, that'd be interesting. You would have an answer then
Related question:
It common for shooters to use brake cleaner to stop the reaction on their brushes. Would ordinary 91% alcohol work?