4 in 1
Probably not, I shared them on 6mmbr and they sicked the dogs on me, said they use Conservative cleaning methods on 6mmBR, like nylon brushes, cleaners that don't have ammonia, tampons up the petutie while they hope and pray they didn't scratch their Bartlein barrels. My cleaning methods to say the least are aggresive old Hoppes, Sweets, 3 in 1 oil. My cleaning thread is still there on 6mmBR under my name in the archive section. I guess Paul blew his cool when I mentioned using old Hoppes, Sweets, drano, steel wool, and toothpaste to recover an ignored BR barrel and make it near new so you can win again with that once shiny tube you slept with before a big shoot. And of coarse new stiff brass cleaning brushes some times a .27 cal or a .30 cal brush in a 6 cal barrel and a stiff 6 brush in a 22 barrel. Patches I use 1 3/4 and 1 3/8in for barrels 6 and 1 3/8 and 1 1/4 in or 22 barrels. If patches have a hard time passing through a barrel I cut the corners off or change rod tips. One thing Harvey never taught me was using rubbing alcohol on patches I am a disciple on using rubbing alcohol. After you patch out with rubbing alcohol your first shot will hit where your last shot hit the last group given a similar condition. I also leave my lube on the bullets that I make, no dry bullets down my barrels. This allows a shooter to shoot on the record target immediately if you like the condition and if it hits where you figure you can run your group without going to the sighter. I don't ignore the sighter but 1-2 minutes in a condition will allow you to shoot the best group of the day. Sometimes that snake group as Harvey called them will help you win the agg and the grand agg. Harvey was my smith and best friend before he passed.
In the 70's brite bore brushes were the brush, still have some. Also short stiff cleaning rods Parker Hale then Dewey now and I use Russ Haydon bore guides also the Hall bore guide I have for my Hall action. Just pretend I didn't say some of this stuff. thanks.
Stephen Perry
Angeles Br