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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Suppressors
Carbon cleaning
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<blockquote data-quote="shootnpoke" data-source="post: 2596526" data-attributes="member: 42996"><p>I have a titanium monocore can with an aluminum cerakoted tube. The core has more curves and crannies than I can remember right now. I do use CLR to soak the core then brush it with a nylon brush to get the gunk off. Afraid to use it on the tube for fear of etching and messing up the serial number. I have found that using window cleaner, non ammonia type works as good as anything I have tried. </p><p>I will be trying the Dot5 trick next time I clean it. Thanks for the tip. Besides the initial wait time, cleaning is the worst part of owning suppressors.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="shootnpoke, post: 2596526, member: 42996"] I have a titanium monocore can with an aluminum cerakoted tube. The core has more curves and crannies than I can remember right now. I do use CLR to soak the core then brush it with a nylon brush to get the gunk off. Afraid to use it on the tube for fear of etching and messing up the serial number. I have found that using window cleaner, non ammonia type works as good as anything I have tried. I will be trying the Dot5 trick next time I clean it. Thanks for the tip. Besides the initial wait time, cleaning is the worst part of owning suppressors. [/QUOTE]
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