Boyd Allen
Active member
I just borescoped a barrel that was cleaned without brushing (this time) after about 30 rounds had been fired with 133. It is clean except at the front edge of the angled section that is the transition between the neck portion of the chamber and the short freebore. Everything in front of, and behind that area looks fine. I did this cleaning with Patchout, and Accelerator, dried the barrel thoroughly, and wet it with BBS and left that in for a half hour, before patching that dry. There was no sign of copper on the patches. At the end of the shooting session, I had finalized a retune of the barrel with out the tuner that had previously been on it, and with the Deresonator moved to within 3/4" from the muzzle. At the end of my retune, it was shooting a dot, despite the number of rounds that had been fired.
I know that there is more than one approach to getting rid of this ring of fouling. What I am contemplating is which one will have the least effect on the throat, after a number of repetitions, and that is the reason for this post.
Recently I read an account of one fellow's use of a short section of cleaning rod, powered by a cordless screwdriver, using .30 cal. bronze brush, spun for 30 seconds. There is also Tony Boyer's old method that involves filling an over sized (6.5?) nylon brush with IOSSO and doing the same thing for less time manually. I have also considered wrapping a 6mm brush with an oiled patch that slightly overhangs the front of the brush, and applying IOSSO to the patch right where the brush ends, and spinning that by hand. Do any of you have any other methods that you like, that I have not mentioned?
Thanks,
Boyd
I know that there is more than one approach to getting rid of this ring of fouling. What I am contemplating is which one will have the least effect on the throat, after a number of repetitions, and that is the reason for this post.
Recently I read an account of one fellow's use of a short section of cleaning rod, powered by a cordless screwdriver, using .30 cal. bronze brush, spun for 30 seconds. There is also Tony Boyer's old method that involves filling an over sized (6.5?) nylon brush with IOSSO and doing the same thing for less time manually. I have also considered wrapping a 6mm brush with an oiled patch that slightly overhangs the front of the brush, and applying IOSSO to the patch right where the brush ends, and spinning that by hand. Do any of you have any other methods that you like, that I have not mentioned?
Thanks,
Boyd