Breaking in a new barrel. How important is it to get every bit of carbon out?
The manufacturer recommends cleaning after every round for the first 5 shots, then every 5 rounds for the next 15. That’s 8 cleanings.
I can get the copper out with solvent and patches, a nylon brush if need be. Getting 100 percent of the carbon out requires an abrasive cleaner like iosso. Not a fan of doing that 8 times in one day on a new barrel.
Barrel came lapped from the manufacturer. They test fired 4 shots for a .35moa group. Photos below show cleaning after those 4 shots. Method was 2 rounds of soak and clean with wipe-out.
2/3 down the barrel (8 inches from the muzzle) Shiny clean - no copper
1/3 down (8 inches from the chamber) no copper, but a thin layer of carbon.
If I want the whole barrel shiny, I’ll need iosso, which I’d normally use every 50-100 rounds, not 8 times for 20 rounds. Seems like a lot.
The manufacturer recommends cleaning after every round for the first 5 shots, then every 5 rounds for the next 15. That’s 8 cleanings.
I can get the copper out with solvent and patches, a nylon brush if need be. Getting 100 percent of the carbon out requires an abrasive cleaner like iosso. Not a fan of doing that 8 times in one day on a new barrel.
Barrel came lapped from the manufacturer. They test fired 4 shots for a .35moa group. Photos below show cleaning after those 4 shots. Method was 2 rounds of soak and clean with wipe-out.
2/3 down the barrel (8 inches from the muzzle) Shiny clean - no copper
1/3 down (8 inches from the chamber) no copper, but a thin layer of carbon.
If I want the whole barrel shiny, I’ll need iosso, which I’d normally use every 50-100 rounds, not 8 times for 20 rounds. Seems like a lot.