Took less than 10 minutes to drill and tap for attachmentsA brass rod is a brass rod, but if it ain't threaded for the attachments you need, then it ain't very useful as a ramrod or cleaning rod.
Took less than 10 minutes to drill and tap for attachmentsA brass rod is a brass rod, but if it ain't threaded for the attachments you need, then it ain't very useful as a ramrod or cleaning rod.
Yeah, it took you that long. And it would take me that long (though I'm not sure I currently have the right tap ). But a lot of people just like to shoot BP guns and don't have the machinery, attachments, and experience to drill and tap things -- especially to center-drill a rod accurately.Took less than 10 minutes to drill and tap for attachments
This is why there's often concern expressed about those expensive Dewey coated rods. I originally got one for my CZ .22 target rifle, but don't use it for that any longer (although it's nice to put a small cotton bore swab on it to clean out the patent breech in the Crockett .32!).Metal is easier to keep polished and grit-free. That's what erodes your muzzles the most, crap you pick up from the ground that embeds in the rod material.
It’s a good. Club so please don’t pre judge them , it was actually two separate clubs a couple of powder horns on the bench also exploded last year. It’s a friends club 130 miles from me we can only speculate how these things happen. I have no real detailI don't think I'd be shooting at that club. It's not the rod material that appears to be the problem.
Use a bore guide. Your steel rod will never touch the bore. Then there is no chance dirt grime and abrasives can be imbedded in your plastic or wood beads. Bore guides have been around forever. You can make one out of anything solid.I have been saving a 72" .25" steel surveyors rod I acquired to use for locating a buried tank. Very straight, a wee bit of flex and spring to it. I was thinking it could be made into a range rod but worry about the potential for damaging the bore. But after reading some of the ideas other folks have come up with, I am thinking I can get wood, HDPE or nylon beads the proper diameter for close clearance in each of my rifle bores and then drill the center holes out so they are a snug fit to keep the rod in the center of the bore. Not HC but certainly durable.
That is what I did? Ray Charle`s could do it.Took less than 10 minutes to drill and tap for attachments
Good on you with the donation!My first range rod was a piece of 316 SST tubing. I had a friend weld 10-32 nuts at each end, Cost me a six pack. I still have it but I plan on giving it to a youngster who is building his first kit.
That rod is notorious for muzzle wear.I use fiberglass..haven't broke one yet.
Doesn't bother me.....my barrels are coned anyway.That rod is notorious for muzzle wear.
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