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Crown cleaning, with muzzle break.

Looking for tips to get this baked on carbon without damage to crown. This is after 200 rounds. Barrel wears a self timing MPA break.
 

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I remove my brakes and clean the crown and barrel after every range session. That said, my big boomers can acquire a mixture of carbon/powder fouling along with some vaporized copper on the crown that takes a little effort to remove. I usually soak a patch in Bore Tech and press it on the crown and let it remain there for 15-20 minutes and then give it a few rubs. It takes more than one patch but it will come off. If the carbon is really stubborn, you can use a razor blade held at a very shallow angle and carefully slice it off
 
Other than looks, which the brake hides, I dont think it hurts a thing. If you look at the pic closely, the actual crown itself is very clean. The carbon is on the face of the muzzle.

Dont get me wrong, no harm in pride of ownership and wanting to do due diligence, but IME, it wont build on the crown on a centerfire rifle and shouldn't hurt a thing, being there. The only caveat to that is I've cleaned muzzles that have been caked with carbon/oils/cleaners, etc for long periods, that had pretty significant pitting ON THE MUZZLE but not the crown itself. Maybe on a low pressure subsonic load but never on high pressure CF cartridges
Fwiw..
 
I remove my brakes and clean the crown and barrel after every range session. That said, my big boomers can acquire a mixture of carbon/powder fouling along with some vaporized copper on the crown that takes a little effort to remove. I usually soak a patch in Bore Tech and press it on the crown and let it remain there for 15-20 minutes and then give it a few rubs. It takes more than one patch but it will come off. If the carbon is really stubborn, you can use a razor blade held at a very shallow angle and carefully slice it off
Ditto, except for the razor blade, let it set over night.
 
It has been my experience that cleaning up the carbon buildup on the end of the muzzle is rather easy compared to the carbon ring in the chamber. Lower temperature and no pressure to speak of means that the deposit is soft and easily dissolved with BoreTec C4.
 
I just spray the brake down with pressurized action cleaner and use q-tips to get some of the residue out. I might take the brake off one a year, if I’m feeling bored.
 

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