Thanks everyone. Just cleaned after a long day of off-and-on shooting. She hasnt rusted to bits yet!
For years, I cleaned after every shooting session. Not between AM and PM, but certainly between today and tomorrow. Where I live is not as humid as down south. One exception to my daily cleaning rule happened after a two-day match at Fort Shenandoah, Va. I cleaned between Saturday and Sunday, but was really tired after three days of shooting and wiped down my musket, put it in the truck, and drove 14 hours home. Went to work and cleaned the gun Monday evening. Surface rust everywhere there was fouling, and the musket, which had been "like new" for ten years, was never the same. Surface pits and even some in the first two inches of the bore.
Shoot it, clean it, and keep it forever.
ADK Bigfoot
Store your cleaned and oiled firearms with the muzzle down so oil can't pool in the breech.I have to add that I re oil my barrels every few weeks if not used to make sure there is oil coating them. the canola tends to drain to the breech.
LBL
Swab your gun with alcohol or MAP before loading and the oil won't matter. Though I wouldn't use canola oil.Store your cleaned and oiled firearms with the muzzle down so oil can't pool in the breech.
Neither the alcohol nor MAP will remove the oil that has gelled in the flash channel.
Been hanging around my family's farm in South Carolina, and have been shooting off and on with my fowler throughout the day. Is this ok? If it goes several hours between shots/cleanings? I always clean the night after use of course. I am worried about rust and such. -Larry
Going back to Col Peter Hawker, in his book "Instructions", he reckoned that if a gun had been used a little , it should be cleaned after a week.
Yes I know, we don't do that do we?
But using occasionally over a day will do no harm.
I went for about a week between baths. Oh, you meant my rifle...
So you got a taste of the humidity that can be seen as you head south.... Fort Shenandoah is around 400 miles north of where I am, but you get the idea. Cool here right now, only about 80° this morning, but the humidity is hanging around 90%. When I take a shot hunting in weather like this and I immediately reload without cleaning (not very often) so I can quickly follow up on the animal, I will shoot out or pull the load after no more than a couple of hours and clean the gun. Rust and pitting are one thing, but that powder residue attracts enough moisture as it’s turning to goo that there is a good chance the powder charge will get fouled to the point where it won’t ignite when I want it to.For years, I cleaned after every shooting session. Not between AM and PM, but certainly between today and tomorrow. Where I live is not as humid as down south. One exception to my daily cleaning rule happened after a two-day match at Fort Shenandoah, Va. I cleaned between Saturday and Sunday, but was really tired after three days of shooting and wiped down my musket, put it in the truck, and drove 14 hours home. Went to work and cleaned the gun Monday evening. Surface rust everywhere there was fouling, and the musket, which had been "like new" for ten years, was never the same. Surface pits and even some in the first two inches of the bore.
Shoot it, clean it, and keep it forever.
ADK Bigfoot
Regular Hoppes #9 is good for smokeless powder, but pretty useless with black powder. They do have a formula for black powder called Hoppes #9 Plus you may want to try if you like the aroma of Hoppes. Soap and water, even plain water, is all you really need for cleaning black powder residue.New to muzzleloading. Always use Hoppes #9 cleaner for my rifles and handguns. Is this bad for cap and ball?
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