Not having your equipment in front of me, I really can't do anything more constructive than tell you what I use.
For patches I use the common 1 3/8" square patches that Sinclair sells. My jag is typically the piercing type (made by or for Sinclair) designed to screw directly onto the male threads of my Dewey rod. (Their diameters are a perfect match.) I use one of my Bore tech rods to brush, mostly because it has female threads that I can screw brushes directly into without an adapter, and because I have it.
I find that pairing different brand rods as a set makes it easier to identify which one has the jag or brush when removing them from their storage case. I use the .22 CF diameter jag for my 6PPC barrels, not wanting a tight fit that would cause most of the solvent to be squeezed out of the patch, into the chamber, as it entered the bore, where it would do little to help clean the barrel.
I mostly shoot 133, and use Butch's Bore shine for a solvent, although I use other products, such as Wipe Out (bore cleaning foam) and JB.
The brushes, that I use, are bronze, 6mm size.
A friend who had grown tired of his coated rods trying to bow under the pressure created when starting a new brush down his rifles barrels, is quite happy with the additional stiffness that a polished Pro Shot gives him. (Without the coating the metal can be thicker which makes them stiffer.) I just pay more attention when I am, and get some help from my tube within a tube cleaning rod guide that Chet Whitebread made.
My used patches and brush splatter are captured by an old plastic soft drink bottle that is held in position by a Bore Tech Patch Hog, from back in the day, when I believe that I was the first one to do an article on their product line (for Shooters News).
All in all, I like how this combination of equipment and consumables performs.
I might mention one more thing. Of course I never try to run a dry patch through a dirty barrel, and the lubrication provided by my cleaning patches (as opposed to the ones that I use to dry the bore) being well wetted with solvent ( applied in a solvent port, in the back of my bore guide) keeps the effort needed to push then through the barrel down to a level that is quite manageable. Pushing a dry patch down a clean barrel to dry it, is not a problem.