Uncle Miltie
50 Cal.
Clean with regular unheated water and your rust problem will go away.
Clean with regular unheated water and your rust problem will go away.
I always store all of my guns in a 78% nitrogen atmosphere!Overcleaning a muzzleloader probably reduces its life by hundreds of years.
You should really consider storing your muzzleloader in a nitrogen atmosphere as well.
What if you clean with hot water and don't have a rust problem?Clean with regular unheated water and your rust problem will go away.
I am not familiar with RIG? Is it better than Barricade which I have been using?Ditto on the Rig. I've used it for decades. I had my 45 flintlock stored in a closet in SE Alaska for several years where it rains 120 inches or more a year. A heavy coat of Rig in the bore and all the metal kept it in fine shape.
Hmmmmmmm? Really?I always store all of my guns in a 78% nitrogen atmosphere!
So why would cold water keep the rust away? Thanks.Clean with regular unheated water and your rust problem will go away.
I use Mink Oil to lube.What do you lube with? I don't see flash rusting. Am I doing something wrong?
If you use cool water you will be cooler.....What if you clean with hot water and don't have a rust problem?
Hot water often causes flash rust.So why would cold water keep the rust away? Thanks.
Hot water can cause flash rusting...I simply put a toothpick in my vent hole, fill the barrel with tap water and then pour the water out, then repeat...Run several patches down the bore to dry and pour a little rubbing alcohol down the bore, pour out...Then dry with patches, spray with WD-40, swab and then run a patch down with your favorite gun oil, done...So why would cold water keep the rust away? Thanks.
I agree Uncle Miltie. I learned the hard way I flash rusted 2 new Traditions barrels before I figured it out.Hot water often causes flash rust.
Are you seeing rust in the bore or on the outside? Is the mink oil applied to the bore or outside? A long time ago, I did see some flash rusting on something, but since then it hasn't recurred. Evidently I changed my procedure and accidentally got it right. Groovy.I use Mink Oil to lube.
Apparently I sort of stumbled into this procedure independently. I figured out how AI was getting flash rusting; when I started out, I used boiling water. I did see some flash rusting with this methodology. Later, boiling water became tedious, so I switched to hot tap water and found that it worked just fine. Now, if only I could actually get real sperm oil or bear grease.... Then again, Bore Butter seems to work well.Edward Mead's 1851 "Illustrated Treatise Of the Rifle, Shot-Gun, and Pistol" advises "Hot water should be used, making the operation as quick as possible. If t,he barrels has become leaded and you have not the regular cleaning rod with scraper, scratch brush, &tc, it can be scoured with fine sand or brick-dust, which should be used with water; this will effectively remove the lead. The effect of hot water is to warm the barrel, which greatly accelerates its being wiped dry to prevent rust. It should be oiled inside and out after washing. If used soon, the inside oiling may be omitted. The best kind of oil for the purpose is the pure sperm or bear's oil . Sweet oil should never be used: it contains a vegetable acid and is sure to rust the gun."
Meade was a contemporary of the Hawkens, operating in St. Louis at the same time. Instructions are for "stub twist, wire twist, and damascus".
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