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Joined: Jan 2002
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Joined: Jan 2002
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Originally Posted by Jusanothajoe
Just don't understand why anyone would need anything that harsh to clean a shotgun?
Do some clean their guns once every five years whether they need it or not?

‘Cause it’s sitting on the shelf, and nobody has any carburetors to clean anymore?

I cleaned a rather unfortunate Wingmaster 870 that had never been cleaned since unwrapped for Christmas in 1968. It lived in a duck boat, and the owner, a University of Pennsylvania graduate who was an executive at an insurance company large enough to have in in-plant printing operation, allowed his teen aged daughter to carve her initials in the stock, which, led to a big chunk of that bowling ball finish coming off.

The stuff built up inside that gun was impervious to lesser solvents.

Yes, those guys are out there, and, they should know better.

Best,
Ted

gjw #659885 04/16/25 10:30 AM
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I've been shooting clays a lot the last few years and therefore doing a lot of barrel cleaning. I have found a quick and easy way that works for me. I make my own cleaning rods out of 7/16 or 1/2 inch hardwood dowel. I put a large slot about 2 inches long at the end so they can hold a large patch or steel wool. The end at the slot is also narrowed or flattened. I spray the barrels with wd-40 and put a large wad of course steel wool on the rod and make about six passes, not letting it go out of the muzzle. I give the choke area, the forcing cone and the first 6-8 inches of the barrel a little extra and that's it. Wipe it out and all the fouling, including the plastic, is gone. Make sure to use the course steel wool. It's soft and won't hurt your barrels. The wd-40 softens the plastic and acts as a lubricant for the steel wool. I can clean a set of barrels in just a few minutes and all of the plastic fouling is gone. And no, I don't use wd-40 anywhere else on my guns.

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Originally Posted by Jusanothajoe
Just don't understand why anyone would need anything that harsh to clean a shotgun?
Do some clean their guns once every five years whether they need it or not?


Common sense would dictate that you should use what you actually need. For a well maintained shotgun with clean shiny bores, plain old Hoppes No. 9 or most any inexpensive bore cleaner would be fine. Removing leading in a revolver barrel or bullet jacket deposits in a varmint rifle bore is going to require something that dissolves that material without harming the barrel steel.

Hammergun reports he is able to scrub plastic deposits out of his bores with steel wool and WD-40. An older neglected gun that has some bore pitting might need a bore solvent that is stronger or more aggressive. Oftentimes, guns were neglected to the point that bores needed honed or polished to clean them up. And sometimes enough metal is removed that the barrel wall thickness may become dangerously thin. I see guns all the time at Gun Shows that would sell much easier and for more money if they were given even a quick cleaning job.

At the other extreme, we have one OCD guy here who recently announced that he wipes down his guns and waxes his cars at least twice a week. That seems a mite excessive, unless you live in a tent on the Alaskan peninsula.

Last Fall, I bought a set of 28" double barrels on Ebay that were sold as unknown brand. I recognized them as 12 ga. Syracuse Lefever, and was the only bidder. I bought them very cheap at the opening bid price, which included free shipping. They were totally covered with a brown-green-black spray paint camouflage job, which was evident in the photos. I cleaned them with one coat of citrus paint stripper, and then finished the stubborn spots along the ribs and in the rib matting with the more potent methylene chloride paint stripper. The original blue underneath remained and was unharmed. Using the correct cleaner made the job quick and easy.


Voting for anti-gun Democrats is dumber than giving treats to a dog that shits on a Persian Rug

1 member likes this: Ted Schefelbein
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