Once you let a carbon ring build up they’re a pain to get rid of. I had a good shooting rifle that started being not so good. I read about the carbon ring and decided to check it out. I had one so thick it had topography.
View attachment 7811727My previous method of cleaning consisted of cleaning after every outing with only cleaner on patches with a few strokes with a nylon brush every few outings. So I attacked the carbon ring with a brass brush, first I soaked a Tipton cleaning pellet with cleaner and let it soak on the ring for a couple hours and then scrubbed vigorously with a brass brush. This was then result.
View attachment 7811734
I got most of it. Then I got some JB Bore Paste. I soaked the ring with Kroil for a little while, wrapped a patch soaked with Kroil around a nylon brush then covered it with the bore paste and scrubbed the ring are real good. It did the trick. There is a little faint carbon left, but I’m fine with that so long as it doesn’t affect accuracy.
View attachment 7811736The gun started shooting good again with no cold bore fliers.
I recently started shooting ARA Factory class. The first thing I noticed is everyone (almost everyone) would scrub their bores with brass brushes between every card (30-40 shots). My first match I didn’t. It was a Six card match. I shot a perfect card on the first one, first match ever. I didn’t bring cleaning equipment and wouldn’t have used it anyway because I didn’t think I needed to. Several people offered to let me use their stuff, but I declined. From the first card to the last there was a linear decline in score. Seeing is believing. I now clean between every card and it works.
Take that for what you will. I’m no expert just sharing my experience.