• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

DIY cleaning patches

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I'm thinking of just getting some cloth from the fabric store and making my own cleaning patches.

Have you guys done this?
Do the patches have to be round, or can Just cut squares?
Can I use muslim cloth instead of t-shirt cloth?
What size for .50 cal and 12 gauge?
Old white tee shirt material is the best. MUST be 100% cotton.
I cut mine in random shapes; square, triangle, rectangular, trapezoid, whatever.
Shape is not critical.
I wet a patch and wrap it around an undersized copper brush and run it down the barrel. Give it a couple of twists when the cloth/brush bottoms out against the breech plug. Use in conjunction with a breech plug scraper that is contoured to match the face of your breech plug. Some are flat and some are dished out. One of the reasons I despise patent breeches is that you cannot clean them this way.
 
I’ve used cotton flannel for decades. Works great and cleans quickly. I make my own solvent which I’ve used for many years skirmishing with the N-SSA.

As a Christmas present every year (c.1968 until the early 1980s) I’d receive cotton flannel pajamas. I’d also receive flannel shirts throughout the year. Old pajamas/shirts wouldn’t be thrown out but would be recycled for cleaning patches. A pair of pajamas or shirt would yield a couple hundred or more patches. Long Winter evenings would spent cutting up the garments into patches. I’d cut the garments into 2” square patches.

Hope that helps!
 
I’ve used cotton flannel for decades. Works great and cleans quickly. I make my own solvent which I’ve used for many years skirmishing with the N-SSA.

As a Christmas present every year (c.1968 until the early 1980s) I’d receive cotton flannel pajamas. I’d also receive flannel shirts throughout the year. Old pajamas/shirts wouldn’t be thrown out but would be recycled for cleaning patches. A pair of pajamas or shirt would yield a couple hundred or more patches. Long Winter evenings would spent cutting up the garments into patches. I’d cut the garments into 2” square patches.

Hope that helps!
I go to Joann's after Christmas and buy the Christmas print flannel that is marked down. I don't worry about cleaning patches being 100% cotton as you can see many others don't either and I sure don't worry about the thickness.
 
I go to Joann's after Christmas and buy the Christmas print flannel that is marked down. I don't worry about cleaning patches being 100% cotton as you can see many others don't either and I sure don't worry about the thickness.
Any cleaning patch material that has any synthetic fibers woven into the fabric will not absorb your cleaner of choice or wet fouling as well as 100% cotton.
 
Any cleaning patch material that has any synthetic fibers woven into the fabric will not absorb your cleaner of choice or wet fouling as well as 100% cotton.
If it is a a cotton blend most of the time it is 80% cotton. This will work just fine. Most T shirts are a blend anymore and they still work fine.
 
Back
Top