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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Barrel Cleaning help/advice
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<blockquote data-quote="7stw" data-source="post: 1917678" data-attributes="member: 22854"><p>Yes, its primary purpose is to remove carbon from intake manifolds. Some you dump into fuel, the other is spray , with a long tube. I use the spray can form. I give it a generous soaking application, with the supplied tube, then scrub, either with plastic, or bronze, vigorously. Then run a cleaning patch, it usually comes out pretty black. Also, you can safely leave it in the bore. It is a petroleum distillate, and will not harm any barrel. If you jag the barrel, just before shooting, it probably will be tinged, black, which means its pulled more carbon.</p><p>A lot of the propellants we use nowadays, leave a very hard carbon signature,that are really tough ,that you may think are gone, that really aren't. Particularly ball powders, the high energy and cfe powders as well.</p><p>Carbon is a copper magnet, so the more carbon you control, the less copper you get!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="7stw, post: 1917678, member: 22854"] Yes, its primary purpose is to remove carbon from intake manifolds. Some you dump into fuel, the other is spray , with a long tube. I use the spray can form. I give it a generous soaking application, with the supplied tube, then scrub, either with plastic, or bronze, vigorously. Then run a cleaning patch, it usually comes out pretty black. Also, you can safely leave it in the bore. It is a petroleum distillate, and will not harm any barrel. If you jag the barrel, just before shooting, it probably will be tinged, black, which means its pulled more carbon. A lot of the propellants we use nowadays, leave a very hard carbon signature,that are really tough ,that you may think are gone, that really aren't. Particularly ball powders, the high energy and cfe powders as well. Carbon is a copper magnet, so the more carbon you control, the less copper you get! [/QUOTE]
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