This is the thing that upsets me seeing it suggested on the internet. People will gravitate to it out of laziness.then you have the one's who say you don't need to clean your barrels at all.
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This is the thing that upsets me seeing it suggested on the internet. People will gravitate to it out of laziness.then you have the one's who say you don't need to clean your barrels at all.
I’ve often wondered how those who rarely, if ever, clean barrels avoid the dreaded carbon ring. I think I know the answer to my own question. They don’t.This is the thing that upsets me seeing it suggested on the internet. People will gravitate to it out of laziness.
Yepppppppp! A little and often is a much better approach. These PRS guys that run 100s of rounds between cleaning if they actually mapped their fps and impacts they would see.One of the biggest culprits in ruining barrels is these Disciplines that are set up so shooters have to put as many as 150 rounds down a barrel before it’s cleaned. And then the shooter has to use all sorts of draconian procedures to get it “clean”.
I have always said that the secret to keeping a barrel clean is to never let all of that crap build up. You do that the way Short Range Benchrest Shooters do. No matter how many rounds you shoot on your relay, you clean it after every target.
Even when I practice or am testing, I never shoot more than 10/15 rounds without cleaning. I never take a rifle hope dirty.
And I never use anything but Butches, a bronze brush, and patches.
Abrasive on a bronze brush and a cleaning rod that doesn't rotate.I've used this pic a million times... cleaned with KG2 bore paste and a brush after every 25 rounds fired. It's a 7mm/284win F class barrel. Pic is at 800 rounds and this is the muzzle end of the barrel.
Should measure .277" x .284". It now measures at the muzzle end .279" x .2855". Basically a full .002" was taken out of the barrel.
View attachment 1703117
I've not seen this.People don't seem to realise that after you use and abrasive cleaner barrels seem to pick up copper until they run in again. Some get themselves into a viscous circle of using abrasive to get the copper out and to try and smooth the barrel out which causes more copper fouling.
The key might be you are only working 3-4 inches? I think most are working the full barrel. I may try your method. I use JB and the pelletsI've not seen this.
I use 6 patches/10 cycles with each patch with Flitz bore cleaner wrapped around a parker hale jag every 50 to 100 rounds for several years over a total of 12 barrel and 40,000 rounds. The patches are worked in the first 3-4 inches only.
All of the barrels are 223 Wylde. Most of the barrels are from White Oak Armament with a few X Caliber and a few Shilen.
I get very little to no copper [using BoreTech eliminator] until 2800-3000 rounds. Accuracy falls off/random fliers starting in the mid 3000 round count.
Yes as per above I think it's because your concentrating on the first 3-4" which during firing quickly gets a layer of carbon. The carbon prevents the copper from sticking to the barrel steel.I've not seen this.
I use 6 patches/10 cycles with each patch with Flitz bore cleaner wrapped around a parker hale jag every 50 to 100 rounds for several years over a total of 12 barrel and 40,000 rounds. The patches are worked in the first 3-4 inches only.
All of the barrels are 223 Wylde. Most of the barrels are from White Oak Armament with a few X Caliber and a few Shilen.
I get very little to no copper [using BoreTech eliminator] until 2800-3000 rounds. Accuracy falls off/random fliers starting in the mid 3000 round count.
Sorry. I'm not getting the point.Yes as per above I think it's because your concentrating on the first 3-4" which during firing quickly gets a layer of carbon. The carbon prevents the copper from sticking to the barrel steel.
Like when you run in a barrel you usually see copper streaks more at the muzzle end. If you clean back to bare metal you will see streaks the full length of the barrel. As it runs in and you start going to 5-10 shot groups it usually only lays copper toward the muzzle. Do you think that is because it's running in or because the carbon is acting as a lube / barrier to metal / copper contact? Why do you think speedy uses lockeze after cleaning?
I think that one distinction that needs to be made is between Flitz polish and Flitz bore cleaner. In the case of the bore cleaner there is some abrasive that is quite easy to feel, not a lot, but it is definitely there.I think that might the clay carrier more than the abrasive. But I'm not an expert.
I called the makers of Flitz and they said the material in their product is so micro fine it's not even considered an abrasive.
I think that one distinction that needs to be made is between Flitz polish and Flitz bore cleaner. In the case of the bore cleaner there is some abrasive that is quite easy to feel, not a lot, but it is definitely there.
SO you're saying all of us who have first person experience with this are full of bull shit?In the 1990s I was a plant engineer at International Truck (Navistar) Springfield Assembly Plant. I worked with some of the finest engineers, fabricators, machinists, toolmakers, electricians, and maintenance managers that ever lived. We built entire departments of equipment, machines and fixtures. Millions and millions of dollars.
Well, the upper managers came up with this notion called the "challenge chip". It was a poker chip that you threw out when (in a meeting) someone said something unfounded or combative, or basically when someone was just talking out of the side of their mouth. My friend Chris Keaton (the finest electrical controls engineer that ever lived) called this poker chip the "bullshit chip".
So, when you heard "well I heard", or "this one time", and of course "everyone knows", etc etc ol' Chris would throw out his bullshit chip and say "show me... I'm from Missouri, show me". And if they couldn't, we just moved on.
Well, I'm throwing out the chip. Until someone shows me you can remove material from a steel barrel with cloth and Iosso or Flitz (which I'm saying can't be done), or you can remove steel with a soft bronze brush (which I'm saying can't be done), and by logic placing one on the other can't remove steel, I'm simply going to remain on my side of the fence. No matter how authoritative the person on the other side may be.
How much metal has to be removed to change your mind/win the challenge?In the 1990s I was a plant engineer at International Truck (Navistar) Springfield Assembly Plant. I worked with some of the finest engineers, fabricators, machinists, toolmakers, electricians, and maintenance managers that ever lived. We built entire departments of equipment, machines and fixtures. Millions and millions of dollars.
Well, the upper managers came up with this notion called the "challenge chip". It was a poker chip that you threw out when (in a meeting) someone said something unfounded or combative, or basically when someone was just talking out of the side of their mouth. My friend Chris Keaton (the finest electrical controls engineer that ever lived) called this poker chip the "bullshit chip".
So, when you heard "well I heard", or "this one time", and of course "everyone knows", etc etc ol' Chris would throw out his bullshit chip and say "show me... I'm from Missouri, show me". And if they couldn't, we just moved on.
Well, I'm throwing out the chip. Until someone shows me you can remove material from a steel barrel with cloth and Iosso or Flitz (which I'm saying can't be done), or you can remove steel with a soft bronze brush (which I'm saying can't be done), and by logic placing one on the other can't remove steel, I'm simply going to remain on my side of the fence. No matter how authoritative the person on the other side may be.
SO you're saying all of us who have first person experience with this are full of bull shit?
How much metal has to be removed to change your mind/win the challenge?
Depending on your thoughts about muzzle damage due to cleaning from the wrong end, the challenge is already won.Good question!!
Which challenge? How would you do it?
I suggested it would be pretty easy. Take a section of barrel. Measure the od. Spin in a lathe and hold the material on the od and show that it removed metal. Should be easy to show with high speed that it removes material way faster than by hand.



