F
f d shuster
Guest
barrel cleaning
I've been putting my Hawkeye borescope to good use for almost 4 years now, using it to monitor the bore condition before, during and after cleaning. There were times when I thought the barrel was clean, since the patches were coming out white. Wrong! Several times found heavy deposits of carbon, usually beginning about 8" to 10" in front of the chamber, for the next 6" to 8", then fairly clean to the muzzle. JB is used with 10 to 20 push strokes, depending on the severity, washed out with Hoppes, dried, scoped and all traces of carbon are gone. The bore once again looks like it's chrome plated. I find powder fouling the easiest to remove, copper a little more difficult, sometimes requiring overnight soaking (with Butch's), and carbon the most difficult to remove. Without the borescope I'd be guessing what is going on inside the barrel, and with it I'm able to prove or dis-prove some of the claims being made-- some products really are "snake-oil". Works for me.
I've been putting my Hawkeye borescope to good use for almost 4 years now, using it to monitor the bore condition before, during and after cleaning. There were times when I thought the barrel was clean, since the patches were coming out white. Wrong! Several times found heavy deposits of carbon, usually beginning about 8" to 10" in front of the chamber, for the next 6" to 8", then fairly clean to the muzzle. JB is used with 10 to 20 push strokes, depending on the severity, washed out with Hoppes, dried, scoped and all traces of carbon are gone. The bore once again looks like it's chrome plated. I find powder fouling the easiest to remove, copper a little more difficult, sometimes requiring overnight soaking (with Butch's), and carbon the most difficult to remove. Without the borescope I'd be guessing what is going on inside the barrel, and with it I'm able to prove or dis-prove some of the claims being made-- some products really are "snake-oil". Works for me.