Bronsin
Silver $$ Contributor
The only one I'm familiar with, it comes in a small white tube.Which IOSSO paste?
The only one I'm familiar with, it comes in a small white tube.Which IOSSO paste?
Also I think it's not unlikely certain powders with copper-supressing properties will hold buildup at the "stain" level, essentially obviating the need to specifically attack copper at all.If you see what appears to be more of a stain, with all of the texture of the underlying metal and the full form of the barrels internal features, your barrel is probably functionally as clean as it needs to be for top performance.
If something like JB isn't doing the job, it's probably because you're doing something wrong. Bore scopes are cheap these days so it's not that hard to keep on top of it and prevent any headaches. No need to complicate things.Before I hold up a doll and ask you to point where this question hurt you, I’m actually curious about other abrasives many of us have around the shop. Mainly if anyone knows if they are useful for the purpose of barrel cleaning.
Many of us have polishing compounds in different colored wax sticks of all kinds, like what we use on buffing wheels to polish metal parts. 15k Grit?
Then there are the automotive polishing compounds, but I’m guessing these are quite soft? These probably go from a course compound of 10k grit up to 20k for polish?
I also have a qt of high $$ glass polish - it will last two lifetimes since it’s rarely used - cerium oxide I think. This must be 20k grit?
I’ll probably polish up the exterior of an old barrel and rub some of each on to see the scratch pattern, unless someone has already done this…
edit: and the conclusion is what - hard abrasive of small size or larger abrasive of soft size is better?
I have a bore scope and JB on the bench. I don’t think it’s complicating things to wonder what the makers of the abrasive cleaners have already tested - there’s no way jb was created on the first try of the first abrasive. At one time or another every abrasive known to man has probably been put down a barrel.If something like JB isn't doing the job, it's probably because you're doing something wrong. Bore scopes are cheap these days so it's not that hard to keep on top of it and prevent any headaches. No need to complicate things.
I can answer this one for JB. You'll never take .0001" off in any sane amount of time. I've chucked a piece of mild steel in a drill and run it full bore for 10 minutes or more trying to take metal off with JB and nothing happened. Not even a little bit. That's what makes JB perfect. Works great on carbon, does nothing to steel.Someone here knows how many strokes of jb and other industrial abrasives it takes to open a bore .0001”