tg said:Has anyone used Olive oil for bore lube/rust protection? if so how does it work?
MikeC said:tg...It's good you wipe the petroluem based oil out before the first shot. Problem is you don't ever want to introduce any ever to the bore. The metal although on a microscopic level is porus and sucks in the oil. The idea is to over a serious of shooting, possibly a 100 shots give or take is to work all the petroleum based oil from the manufator of the steel and the barrel itself out of the bore and keep it out. Goes a long way in improving how the gun loads and easily cleans up.
nchawkeye said:Funny thing is, the first time I recall hearing about all the "problems" with using petroleum lubes was in a TC ad on their new product back in the mid-80s...
Previous to this I had never heard anyone have problems with the tar like buildup they claimed to prevent...
Dan Phariss said:nchawkeye said:Funny thing is, the first time I recall hearing about all the "problems" with using petroleum lubes was in a TC ad on their new product back in the mid-80s...
Previous to this I had never heard anyone have problems with the tar like buildup they claimed to prevent...
I think it depends on the formulation.
Use of petroleum oils for shooting patch lube has caused problems and it is apparently "provable" chemically.
But you have to remember that until the advent of the mass marketed MLs most people used tallow, crisco, bear oil, Sperm Whale oil, spit etc. It was when mass marketing got involved that all sorts of hair brained lubes and such came about.
Mostly designed to make money for those selling the stuff.
The ignorance of MLing exhibited by the buyers of these things resulted in all sorts of silliness and myths.
The "seasoning the bore" myth is one of my favorites. Some shooters still have not caught on that a rifle barrel is not a skillet.
Dan
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