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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
Is Your Barrel Really Clean?
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<blockquote data-quote="cohunt" data-source="post: 1794354" data-attributes="member: 94491"><p>The guy that wrote the article thinks that the blue color is from carbon because he thinks that his suppressor mount brake only has carbon on it-- does he not know that copper is basicly "atomized" in a barrel under heat and pressure and gets deposited on the barrel and brake and crown? I'm pretty sure hes getting copper depisits off of the brake too. </p><p>I have heard that ANY mechanical cleaning (bore paste) of a barrel should be a last resort and some barrel manu's specifically say to not use it on their barrels.</p><p>This all comes down to the hugely debated "my barrel cleaning process is better than yours"</p><p>How clean is too clean? Have you damaged or worn the barrel or crown by mechanically cleaning your barrel? Is there a way to actually prove any of it?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cohunt, post: 1794354, member: 94491"] The guy that wrote the article thinks that the blue color is from carbon because he thinks that his suppressor mount brake only has carbon on it-- does he not know that copper is basicly "atomized" in a barrel under heat and pressure and gets deposited on the barrel and brake and crown? I'm pretty sure hes getting copper depisits off of the brake too. I have heard that ANY mechanical cleaning (bore paste) of a barrel should be a last resort and some barrel manu's specifically say to not use it on their barrels. This all comes down to the hugely debated "my barrel cleaning process is better than yours" How clean is too clean? Have you damaged or worn the barrel or crown by mechanically cleaning your barrel? Is there a way to actually prove any of it? [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
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Is Your Barrel Really Clean?
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