I also wash my rod after every use ….You do know that the Copper cleaner will attack the "Brass Brushes" on a bore snake. You can throw away the fouled Patches on a cleaning rod, but would have to wash a bore snake each time you used it ?
Surely someone has done this already. Waiting for a comment to see the result.Only way to settle the debate is to take two brand new rifles of same chambering/calibre and shoot 100 rounds through both.
'Clean' one with a boresnake and the other with a proper cleaning rod of correct diameter and length, 'parker hale' type jags with tight fitting round patches and quality phosphor bronze brushes, plus good solvents.
Then check with borescope.
Only way to settle the debate is to take two brand new rifles of same chambering/calibre and shoot 100 rounds through both.
Was it a genuine Bore Snake? Was it the right diameter? I have never broken the chord nor have I worried about it.~MuirI’d never use a bore snake after a mate of mine had one snap in the bore. Was a bugger to get it out.
If it is any help, consider the relative surface area.Can't see the logic in using a dirty bore snake to clean a barrel. I use a rod and patches or heavy nylon line (from a garden strimmer) as a pull through with patches if I'm not at home.
That is not the debate as far as I am concerned. Two separate processes.
I know. My post was a shameful thread sidetrack wasn't it?The thread title is literally 'Bore snake Vs cleaning rod'...
Yea but no but ………The thread title is literally 'Bore snake Vs cleaning rod'...
Quite correct sir.That is not the debate as far as I am concerned. Two separate processes.
I use a boresnake every time I take the rifle out to remove oil before I shoot, and after I shoot to remove any condensation formed in a cold barrel entering a warm/humid house atmosphere. Followed by a bore snake loaded with CLP for storage.
I do a chemical clean with Wipe Out, rod, brush and patches every couple of hundred shots when/if I remember...
It is not a case of one or the other, they both have their functions.
Alan
I'm sure there's a lot of other things liable to go wrong with a rifle before you have to start worrying about the detrimental effects of infrequent contact with a piece of string. I reckon you'd have to be doing something pretty dumb with your boresnake - like covering it with cutting paste - before it would cause appreciable wear within the lifetime of a barrel that's designed to cope with the effects of the passage of numerous lumps of hot metal at 3,000 fps.more importantly they are liable to cause wear in the inside of the crown lip as you pull them through as it’s unlikely to come out in a straight line no matter how hard you try.
13 minutes in -I’d recommend a plastic covered cleaning rod and a good bore guide (Shooting Shed custom made for to your chamber size are the best).
The trouble with bore snakes is that they could break as mentioned above but more importantly they are liable to cause wear in the inside of the crown lip as you pull them through as it’s unlikely to come out in a straight line no matter how hard you try.