O.o
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O.o
All this talk about being namby pamby careful with cleaning your rifle has got me worried. I have never used a guide. I have never used solvent. My rifles must be sitting up in the safe talking about how neglectful I am.
I feel like you can get most of the carbon fouling out with a good brush (though I'm sure someone will disagree with me there) but the sort of copper fouling my barrel had when I first got it, I can't see that coming out without a solvent.
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My old man has only ever had one new rifle(a rossi) all his other rifles have been second hand so broken in if you believe it it.
He only uses a pull threw and hoppes or clp .
No visible copper in any of his.
I use a ss one peace rod and oils or solvents as i feel like it.
Some rifles i have had copper the bore a bit but doesn't seem to affect accuracy.
All of em get at least one oiled patch if they go out weather fired or not.
Don't see the need for a guide if you have a quality rod and are carefull.
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- Increases your cleaning speed
- Faster to apply chemical to a patch, as most have a application window
- keep solvent out of the action which, if is a harsh solvent (sweets) I think is a benefit
- Rod alignment is much simpler.
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What do you use? Just a dry patch, nothing else?
When I first got my rifle and I knew nothing about anything, I was all worried about the copper fouling as the guy who had taken me to sight in my rifle said it was a real problem when breaking in a barrel and he had found it out the hard way when he first got a rifle. He couldn't get it to group any good until he started attacking it with the copper solvent. So I sorta neglected the carbon fouling. Anyway, my barrel must have had 35 rounds or so through it before I bought a brush and a bit of carbon solvent to take to it with. Without the brush, a dry patch would go through and stay clean. After the brush and without using the solvent, they were completely black with soot and it took me a fair few passes before they got any better. Then I tried it with the carbon solvent (and brush) and it produced a bit more fouling still on top of that. Dunno how much it affected the accuracy but it sure as hell looked bad.
I should mention that I had been using a boresnake throughout this time and it get that fouling the way the brush and solvent did.
I guess different barrels foul up slightly differently but this was a stainless off a Marlin XS7s.
Yep I pull dry cloth patches through until clean and then an oily one. That is it except for attacking all of the external with a toothbrush and then the residual oil on the cloth that has been through the barrel. I have never had a debate with a dead deer over whether it would have preferred I had cleaned the rifle differently.
Yeah i use them ,,,,machined my own ones up very similar to stoney creek ones ,,,and one piece parker hale coated rods ,,,i think with using a guide it keeps the solvent going where its spose to ,,,, and cuts any chance of damaging throat area
Which is what I said at the end