I would try dawn and water lube, you might be surprised at the results
And no swabbing should be needed with a wet patch and that lube
And no swabbing should be needed with a wet patch and that lube
You of course can have it re-bored but a lot of that roughness looks like carbon fouling to me and a good lead slug lap job will make that rifle shoot as good as new! The roughness is chewing up the patches and hooking the fouling.I did a little Scotch Brite cleaning, and took some new photos with the bore cleaned up some more. This is mostly down by the breech.
I talked with Robert Hoyt, looks like I'll send him my rifle after the New Year.
A .54 caliber is in my future.
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There is a guy on here who rigged up his small gardening pump up tank sprayer to do the same thing.Did anybody ever make or try to use a low flow rate power washer to clean their black powder barrels? Sounds like a potentially good idea, but low flow rate would be very important.
Scotchbrite will clean it and polish the bore.
hey friend. I don't have a bore scope yet.May I ask what the name of the one that you are using. That is very clearI bought a 35-year old .50 cal flintlock last year, and I finally put a borescope down the barrel. Can anyone with technical expertise tell me what you're seeing?
The bore is pretty uniform all the way down, no particular damage in any one spot that I can see. The entire bore looks about the same.
I do see some area of blackened bore with shiny metal poking through (last photo). Is that what I'm seeing? Or is that lead stuck to the bore?
I've heard some people say they can shoot all day without swabbing their barrel, but this thing fouls up pretty good after only a few shots. I swab every other round, and that seems to keep it loading easily. 0.490 ball and 0.015' pillow ticking patch. I've tried 0.018" and 0.020" patches but ramming the ball down becomes quite difficult with thicker patches, even with a clean barrel.
I have soaked the bore with hydrogen peroxide and scrubbed it out good, but I'm too scared to put a brush down the barrel.
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That would be me. Here it is, won't help with the corrosion and pitting but will clean the bore from breech to muzzle. A pressure washer with the longer modification would work just as well. I experimented with modifying a steam cleaner but it didn't do as good a job than plain water from the garden sprayer.There is a guy on here who rigged up his small gardening pump up tank sprayer to do the same thing.
Perhaps he will post the picture again.
May I ask what the name of the one that you are using. That is very clear
thank you sir
i don't use a power washer but do use a steam cleaner. original purpose was a wall paper striper.Did anybody ever make or try to use a low flow rate power washer to clean their black powder barrels? Sounds like a potentially good idea, but low flow rate would be very important.
Whether it is pistols, rifles, unmentionables, whatever...I am in the "Just shoot it" crowd.What is your main purpose for this rifle? If it's just for hunting I would bench rest it and find the best load. If those groups are hunting accurate why spend the money re-boring? If it won't group or If you want a target rifle then spend the money and enjoy a .54 cal. I agree that frequent cleaning can be annoying but for hunting it's not an issue.
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