Re: So cleaning barrels?
For chamber cleaning, which I believe is very important, a cotton bore mop on the end of a chamber rod works well. Bore mops are cheap and washable. Be cautious, just as cleaning the barrel, to avoid jabbing the walls of the throat and lands and grooves with the wire core of the bore mop, or use a flannel cloth patch on the end of a dowel. In and out a few times, and a twist with a carbon remover on the end of the mop may help prevent carbon accumulation at the leade. I never use a wire brush of any kind in my chambers or barrels, unless its a junker barrel and as a last resort I'm trying to dislodge crud in an old bore.
Rods? Someone should make a wooden one. I would use it. I've tried long dowels but they don't twist is the only problem, but I like how they have no joint to snag or bounce on a part of the chamber/bore area.
Just don't go nuts with a cleaning rod and fancy tips that do not really fit the rod, and use a rod guide. We take all kinds of care to center the bullet in a case, then in a chamber, but then poke a metal rod around the very critical area of the rifle. Done carelessly and its like brain surgery with a butcher knife.
Cloth and chemicals, used correctly on the right rod, should be the only thing other than ammo we put in our barrels, unless we're a gunsmith.