Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Using a drill,what did you use as a adapter to get your brush in the action far enough?
I had a thread protector for the threads on the chamber end of the barrel. I put that on and poured CLR down the muzzle and let the barrel sit vertically for an hour. Then I used a brass brush on a drill as described above. Worked great. You could use a baggie or tape on the chamber to keep the clr in there for a while.
I removed the barrel from the action. After letting it sit straight up and down with the clr soaking in the barrel for an hour I then removed the end cap from the chamber threads and inserted the brass brush from the chamber end. You could use anything from tape to a plastic baggie or plastic wrap to seal the chamber end of the barrel so the clr sits in there and soaks.
soak it and stroke it. If you use a drill it will damage a fine barrel if it's a factory barrel go ahead and use the drill. You need a good barrel and that will force the issue soonerI have KG-1 and Yamaha ring free on hand, I have nylon and bronze brushes and a chamber brush.
So whats the best method? Drill or no drill or whatever?
Its a Bartleinsoak it and stroke it. If you use a drill it will damage a fine barrel if it's a factory barrel go ahead and use the drill. You need a good barrel and that will force the issue sooner
The vinegar and hydrogen peroxide is called “the dip” if you want to google it and it creates lead acetate which can soak into your skin and give you lead poisoning. So if you do this do not touch it with skin and do not pour the left over liquid down the drain, take it to your local chemical/hazardous waste recycler.1 to 1 vinegar and hydrogen peroxide will work well also. Ive had 1 carbon ring, stopped using rl16 and all my problems went away?
???did not know this!The vinegar and hydrogen peroxide is called “the dip” if you want to google it and it creates lead acetate which can soak into your skin and give you lead poisoning. So if you do this do not touch it with skin and do not pour the left over liquid down the drain, take it to your local chemical/hazardous waste recycler.
I bet you found out that it so works well, it’s just risky. Straight vinegar works alright by itself. I prefer boretech though, it’s pretty good but it won’t mess anything up, about as safe for you and the material you can get.???did not know this!
I have been using boretech for a while, only tried the vinegar trick once. Hope I dont die.?I bet you found out that it so works well, it’s just risky. Straight vinegar works alright by itself. I prefer boretech though, it’s pretty good but it won’t mess anything up, about as safe for you and the material you can get.
I’d soak a patch and stick it in the throat where you can feel it’s just tight in the neck and rafting down the bore and and tilt the muzzle down and then squirt a bit more boretech into the chamber so that it can keep the ring soaking. It’ll get gummy and come right out soon enough. And there’s no such thing as sitting too long suck as with clr so you could leave it for a couple hours or over night etc and let it really dissolve no matter the material.
The rosey color?CLR works better than C4 for me - but C4 works well. I switched to C4 when I started using a Hellfire... don't want to discolor the finish with CLR, so...
you can avoid that by not soaking your brake overnight. It’s just the dissolved copper reattaching/plating itself to the exterior of the brake. If worse come to worse you can soak your now pink brake in bore solvent to remove the copper plating and you’re back to the original finish.
you can avoid that by not soaking your brake overnight. It’s just the dissolved copper reattaching/plating itself to the exterior of the brake. If worse come to worse you can soak your now pink brake in bore solvent to remove the copper plating and you’re back to the original finish.
you can avoid that by not soaking your brake overnight. It’s just the dissolved copper reattaching/plating itself to the exterior of the brake. If worse come to worse you can soak your now pink brake in bore solvent to remove the copper plating and you’re back to the original finish.
Varget@Brux what powder are you using? FWIW, I use CLR on a 30 cal nylon brush for 6.5 cal attached to a drill.