hogpatrol
Silver $$ Contributor
If you see it on the internet, it must be true.Solid answer.
Until you ask a second shooter....
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If you see it on the internet, it must be true.Solid answer.
Until you ask a second shooter....
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This is excellent advice. Thanks for putting it in order. One follow up question for you..... I have copper brushes and not plastic brushes. What is the best copper removing solvent to go with my copper brushes? Thanks again for your help...
Most likely you have bronze brushes and most shooters i know use butchs bore shine or shooters choice. No need for a box full of solvents. Good bore guide (tk nollan or lucas) pair of ivy rods, bronze brushes and pro shot patches
If you follow this advice using a brass jag, you'll be cleaning till hell freezes over waiting for a clean white patch.ok the items have been covered but not in order nor well imho.
you need to remove carbon first, pick your carbon chem and do a couple of patches, then one dry.
next up is copper, again pick your poison. if you pick an ammonia based cleaner, skip copper brushes,
use patches, mops or fibre/plastic brushes. read the instructions.
( if not ammonia, scrub with copper brush asnd solvent, then a wet patch then a clean patch several mins later)
do this till no grean blue...none..not just a little.
at this point I recommend hopes number 9 to check how clean it is. wet patch thru the bore then come back
in 15 mins and do a dry clean patch...see green keep cleaning.
when you are done most like a light coat of oil in the bore
For a brief time I was using Sweets .762 but then an article came out in Precision Shooting about how the ammonia would disolve steel and an switched back to Hoppe's P.D.Q.I've used every concoction known to the free world and a few from the unfree. .....
I guess I can check back in about 6 months and this post will still be going on. Someone up earlier stated something to the effect of someone will give you the very best way to clean a barrel until the second, third or fourth person gives you his idea. The list will go on and on. Not meaning to down anyone.... There's just so many different theories and believe it or not a lot of them will work very well. I guess it's ..... What works best for you!
read what it says....If you follow this advice using a brass jag, you'll be cleaning till hell freezes over waiting for a clean white patch.
I have no pick for copper removal other than good old number 9.This is excellent advice. Thanks for putting it in order. One follow up question for you..... I have copper brushes and not plastic brushes. What is the best copper removing solvent to go with my copper brushes? Thanks again for your help...
+1- About 5 years ago, the fad was to avoid bronze brushing in favor of nylon brushes due to supposed bore damage.......well guys quickly discovered what a carbon ring is....and that fad quickly disappeared even though quite a few shooters like and swear by Wipe Out. For me, Butches and bronze brushes has always done well for me-followed by Iosso. It is what I am used to, like a ritual-I have gained confidence in my system. Wipe-out takes too long and is a bit messy for my needs. One bit of advice is to keep your solvent out of sunlight...I keep my clear dispensers covered, and use small dispenser bottles to keep it fresh.Regular Hoppes #9 is probably the least active on jacket fouling of any solvent that I can think of. On the subject of ammonia, it depends on the overall composition of the solvent. I will not put Sweets in a barrel any more, but there are other solvents that I use with not apparent issues that have ammonia, but it is in combinations with other chemicals that seem to protect from ammonia related damage. If you want a little more activity than Butch's, try the regular Montana Extreme. I do not need it in my good barrels, but I have used it in them without any problems.
The only way that you really know what is inside of your barrel is to look with a bore scope. Everything else is a guess. The guys that shoot the smallest groups, short range benchrest shooters, pretty much all use bronze brushes, no all but a very comfortable majority. People talk about carbon, when what they are referring to is powder fouling. The reason that I make this distinction is that if you run over patches of powder fouling enough, it coalesces into something that is a LOT harder to remove, which is generally referred to as hard carbon. This is the stuff that only something like IOSSO will remove. No brush or solvent, will touch the stuff. A while back, a friend was getting started in short range benchrest, and I told him that the powder he uses, a very good one, will build some hard carbon over time, and for that reason he should plan on careful IOSSO use every so often. Well he let that go, until at about 600 rounds on his barrel he had accuracy drop off, at that point he used the IOSSO and the barrel was back to shooting better than he had for some time. Currently, his plan is to do that every hundred rounds, working in the back 10" of the bore, since that is where the carbon forms.