ChesterP
Well-Known Member
Carbon and fouling left in cannot be a good thing, period because the rifling will corrode in the presence of any moisture or condensation. Carbon left to build up forms a hard scale which can cover copper fouling if no cleaning is done. I once bought a rifle which had probably never had the barrel cleaned and bore scoping it revealed extensive pitting once it was cleaned.
After every outing I run some KG carbon remover through (this also removes some copper judging by the colour of the patches) and it gets left in for 20 minutes before patching out. Every 70 to 80 rounds or when accuracy starts to drop off, I de-copper using Wipeout Tactical Advantage although I don't like leaving that in too long. M-Pro 7 seems to condition the barrel better though.
If being stored for any length of time, I run an oil patch down the barrel and dry patch before first use but also run a meths soaked mop around the chamber as any residual oil residue prevents effective obturation which I learned to my cost some years back!
People can please themselves what they do but no-one can ever convince me that not cleaning a barrel is a good thing. Basic 101 training in the infantry used to be minimum to pull through a brush, patch, then run an oil patch through. Most older shooters I know who've had their rifles almost as long as I've been alive keep their rifles well maintained and that includes looking after the barrels.
After every outing I run some KG carbon remover through (this also removes some copper judging by the colour of the patches) and it gets left in for 20 minutes before patching out. Every 70 to 80 rounds or when accuracy starts to drop off, I de-copper using Wipeout Tactical Advantage although I don't like leaving that in too long. M-Pro 7 seems to condition the barrel better though.
If being stored for any length of time, I run an oil patch down the barrel and dry patch before first use but also run a meths soaked mop around the chamber as any residual oil residue prevents effective obturation which I learned to my cost some years back!
People can please themselves what they do but no-one can ever convince me that not cleaning a barrel is a good thing. Basic 101 training in the infantry used to be minimum to pull through a brush, patch, then run an oil patch through. Most older shooters I know who've had their rifles almost as long as I've been alive keep their rifles well maintained and that includes looking after the barrels.