Re: tips for cleaning your .22lr
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Greg Langelius *</div><div class="ubbcode-body">For cleaning my C/F rifles, I use a long steel slotted tip. It's skinny for about an inch worth.
I then cut .30cal patches in half to make rectangular patches. They fit onto the tip and go through the bore pretty snug just like those tiny ones with a jag. But the difference is that they hold a lot more solvent, or absorb a lot more solvent, and cover a lot more bore area in a pass.
My technique depends of the solvent's soaking action, and not on brushing, which I think is highly overrated as a means of removing fouling. I only use the brush to distribute the solvent more effectively, and a nylon brush is at least adequate for this purpose.
For R/F bores, I seldom clean at all. I think the process does more harm than good, and if there's somebody cleaning a rimfire every 20 rounds, I'd suggest they stop. It takes probably twice as many shots as that just to season the bore and manage to achieve the bore's true level of accuracy. The lubricant wax/grease does a better job of preserving the bore than anything cleaning might accomplish anyway.
Greg </div></div>
So, should I not use the bulk pack copper washed bullets and instead find bare lead rounds in my rifle?