Howdy Folks;
I recently bought my 14 year old son a Remington LTR in 223 for his first rifle. It was in excellent shape used, previous owner said he put 30 round through it. I had forgot to ask him if he had done any type of breakin on the barrel but the bore did appear shinny clean. The plan on the first trip to the range was to put a round through it and then look at the muzzle for copper in the bore, and then clean after each shot for the next 10 to 20 rounds if it looked like it needed. This is the only rifle in the quiver in the caliber so I had to by a new Dewey cleaning rod. As luck would have it, someone must have messed around with the rod as the mail threaded brass fitting on the end of the rod was missing when i took the plastic cap off the end of the rod. So much for cleaning. My son really wanted to shoot so I said what the hell and let him put 70 rounds down range. Our local range is pretty strict so getting a good look at the muzzle isn't an easy think to do, but I was suspecting things weren't going to look good as the groups started to open up. Sure enough, the bore looked like I was looking down a piece of copper pipe. I went out and got a new rod today and went after the mess with Pro-Shot Copper Solvent IV. Pure blue patches! I brushed and then ran patches through till they were clean, but the bore still didn't look clean. I did that three more times, but every time I brush again, it a purple blue mess again.
It was really pretty stupid on my part, I should have called it quits to regroup better prepared another day, but my son has been patiently waiting for the last two months as we build the rifle up and really wanted to shoot. I'm hoping we didn't just turn his LTR into an action to be re-barreled. Thoughts on getting the bore clean again and/or potential damage done would be much appreciated.
Sorry for the long post, but thought the back story might help.
I recently bought my 14 year old son a Remington LTR in 223 for his first rifle. It was in excellent shape used, previous owner said he put 30 round through it. I had forgot to ask him if he had done any type of breakin on the barrel but the bore did appear shinny clean. The plan on the first trip to the range was to put a round through it and then look at the muzzle for copper in the bore, and then clean after each shot for the next 10 to 20 rounds if it looked like it needed. This is the only rifle in the quiver in the caliber so I had to by a new Dewey cleaning rod. As luck would have it, someone must have messed around with the rod as the mail threaded brass fitting on the end of the rod was missing when i took the plastic cap off the end of the rod. So much for cleaning. My son really wanted to shoot so I said what the hell and let him put 70 rounds down range. Our local range is pretty strict so getting a good look at the muzzle isn't an easy think to do, but I was suspecting things weren't going to look good as the groups started to open up. Sure enough, the bore looked like I was looking down a piece of copper pipe. I went out and got a new rod today and went after the mess with Pro-Shot Copper Solvent IV. Pure blue patches! I brushed and then ran patches through till they were clean, but the bore still didn't look clean. I did that three more times, but every time I brush again, it a purple blue mess again.
It was really pretty stupid on my part, I should have called it quits to regroup better prepared another day, but my son has been patiently waiting for the last two months as we build the rifle up and really wanted to shoot. I'm hoping we didn't just turn his LTR into an action to be re-barreled. Thoughts on getting the bore clean again and/or potential damage done would be much appreciated.
Sorry for the long post, but thought the back story might help.