what is moose milk? is it the same thing as MOOSE SNOT?
Toot, you asked this question back in November, 2020 and responded on 7 November 2020.
thanks' to all of you guys that came back to me with an explanation on the difference between MOOSE MILK & MOOSE SNOT.
We can read the entire previous thread.
What is Moosemilk | Page 2 | The Muzzleloading Forum
In its simplest form, Moose Milk is any mixture of a water soluble oil that emulsifies in water to produce a milky colored liquid. Most often here on the Forum, Moose Milk is mixture of a variable quantity of Ballistol and water. Sometimes soap is added to enhance the cleaning properties. Then occasionally MAP is referred to as Moose Milk. MAP is a mix of equal parts of
Murphy's Oil Soap, rubbing
Alcohol, and Hydrogen
Peroxide. MAP is a very good cleaner with some distractors wary of the extra oxygen from the hydrogen peroxide promoting rust in the barrel. Use a good rust inhibiting oil after clean up.
My Moose Milk mixture uses the old NAPA Cutting and Grinding Oil (1 part) and water (7 parts). Performance wise, there is little difference in the use of any of them.
There are other oils that can be mixed with other solvents to make patch lubricants and cleaners. I have found that all of them seem to work pretty good.
If you use the mix of the emulsified oil and water to soak your loading patches, then allow the patch material to dry, you have a very good dry patch. Of course if you use dry patches, the bore must be damp swabbed between shots because the fouling will be dry and stuck balls are likely.
If you come up with a mix you like, then use it