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How clean is clean?
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<blockquote data-quote="J E Custom" data-source="post: 1979519" data-attributes="member: 2736"><p>I am one of the people that believes in a clean barrel for best accuracy. Every sub 0.099 group I have fired has been in an absolutely clean barrel. (Nothing but bright metal in the bore scope).</p><p></p><p>I start out with a dry patch to see what the bore looks like. (To make the mirrors last on the bore scope, all solvents must be removed from the bore). After seeing what needs to be done I normally start with copper removal. Often this takes care of the small traces of carbon but once the copper is gone and the patches come out clean, following a dry patch I look for traces of carbon in the common places and then carefully scan the entire barrel for anything left.</p><p></p><p>If a bore is not kept in this condition, it can become difficult to clean this well the first time, but once it is really clean, Maintaining this level of cleanliness is easy. copper is easy to remove compared to carbon, But carbon can fill parts of the chamber that need to remain dimensionaly </p><p>as reamed and become stubborn to remove if you don't stay on top of it.</p><p></p><p>I also don't believe in the use of any witches brew for any of this type/level of cleaning and use only solvents designed for removal on these by products to prevent damage or excessive wear to the bore, and never get in a hurry to remove what I placed in the barrel having fun. </p><p></p><p>Some claim that cleaning causes early loss of accuracy. I have not found this to be true with many barrels lasting way longer than I was told they would. I feel just the opposite happens if left dirty,the abrasive powder and carbon can accelerate barrel wear because it is harder than the barrel material And the bullet can carry this debris down the bore at high velocity and scratch or wear the barrel prematurely.</p><p></p><p>So there are different levels of clean that is acceptable to each person and to me Clean Means "CLEAN" .And to be honest, Before I bought a bore scope I didn't know what clean looked like.</p><p>Patches will only tell you that you are no longer removing anything, A bore scope will tell you what you left behind. <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="👍" title="Thumbs up :thumbsup:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f44d.png" data-shortname=":thumbsup:" /> </p><p></p><p>Just My opinion and method for cleaning.</p><p></p><p>J E CUSTOM</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J E Custom, post: 1979519, member: 2736"] I am one of the people that believes in a clean barrel for best accuracy. Every sub 0.099 group I have fired has been in an absolutely clean barrel. (Nothing but bright metal in the bore scope). I start out with a dry patch to see what the bore looks like. (To make the mirrors last on the bore scope, all solvents must be removed from the bore). After seeing what needs to be done I normally start with copper removal. Often this takes care of the small traces of carbon but once the copper is gone and the patches come out clean, following a dry patch I look for traces of carbon in the common places and then carefully scan the entire barrel for anything left. If a bore is not kept in this condition, it can become difficult to clean this well the first time, but once it is really clean, Maintaining this level of cleanliness is easy. copper is easy to remove compared to carbon, But carbon can fill parts of the chamber that need to remain dimensionaly as reamed and become stubborn to remove if you don't stay on top of it. I also don't believe in the use of any witches brew for any of this type/level of cleaning and use only solvents designed for removal on these by products to prevent damage or excessive wear to the bore, and never get in a hurry to remove what I placed in the barrel having fun. Some claim that cleaning causes early loss of accuracy. I have not found this to be true with many barrels lasting way longer than I was told they would. I feel just the opposite happens if left dirty,the abrasive powder and carbon can accelerate barrel wear because it is harder than the barrel material And the bullet can carry this debris down the bore at high velocity and scratch or wear the barrel prematurely. So there are different levels of clean that is acceptable to each person and to me Clean Means "CLEAN" .And to be honest, Before I bought a bore scope I didn't know what clean looked like. Patches will only tell you that you are no longer removing anything, A bore scope will tell you what you left behind. 👍 Just My opinion and method for cleaning. J E CUSTOM [/QUOTE]
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