Lone Carabiner
40 Cal.
- Joined
- Jul 20, 2005
- Messages
- 319
- Reaction score
- 5
as #20, sometimes place in direct sunlight if cleaning during daylight.
I don't dry any of my guns in the oven but my M.L. rifles are dryed on top of my kitchen stove. I lay the barrel across to lit burners works like a charm. I have been doing it this way since the early seventies and never experinced a problem.Plus, how hot do you "bake" it at?
And does anyone have any horror stories relating to drying it this way?
Never put in oven but I have used a hair dryer before reassembly. On a hot sunny day I have put parts in an aluminum pan and set out in the sun. After 30 min. or so parts are hot
I do the same thing but always worry about getting moisture out of the threads of all the screws.I normally just blast with the air compressor , hit the crevices/joints, pivot points etc. with WD 40 (water displacement formula 40), then air blast again. the WD is strictly for displacing (as it is designed) the water. Then coat with oil, lube as always. Quick and done.
Never heard of it.That Eezox is some amazing rust inhibitor.
I was digging in to rust prevention about ten to twelve years ago… maybe longer (the older I get, the faster time seems to pass) and ran across a guy on the web doing his own study in to it. Would take nails, clean any oil off, shine them with sandpaper, and then he put them through different tests, using about ten different things that people use for rust prevention: WD40, CorrosionX, RemOil, CLP, etc. He included one I had never heard of, Eezox. It came out on top, just ahead of CorrosionX, which I was already using, and is some good stuff as well. So we got a quart can of it. Still have 3/4 of it. For all my smokeless guns, after cleaning I wipe them down with a thin coat of it.Never heard of it.
The easiest way is not to get it in the threads in the first place. Whenever I get a new revolver I clean with a good solvent and then pump the action full of Mobil One Synthetic grease. Load it as normal and fire. Cleaning consists of cleaning the bore, chambers, and exterior of the pistol with cold water or any blackpowder solvent you prefer. Cotton patches and gun cleaning q-tips are all that’s needed Although I do have an old Phillips Sonicare toothbrush in my shop for stubborn deposits. After that I dry with clean cotton patches and swabs and finish with a light coat of Eezox or Froglube. I used CLP for years and it worked great too. This is quick, easy, and wont get you banned from the kitchen. Every year or 10,000 rounds you may want to strip and degrease your pistol. It won’t really need it but it may sooth the OCD present in all of us. You won’t find any hint of corrosion inside a pistol so treated.I do the same thing but always worry about getting moisture out of the threads of all the screws.
It’s a corrosion inhibitor, dries to a clear micro film. Doesn’t react with blackpowder combustion or byproducts in any way. Amazon has it for a reasonable cost.Never heard of it.
I would lay odds that a lot of oldtimers used the heat from a fire to dry their M.L? They wern't stupid?I wonder if Wild Bill Hickock bake his guns in the oven?????????????????
Who sells it?I was digging in to rust prevention about ten to twelve years ago… maybe longer (the older I get, the faster time seems to pass) and ran across a guy on the web doing his own study in to it. Would take nails, clean any oil off, shine them with sandpaper, and then he put them through different tests, using about ten different things that people use for rust prevention: WD40, CorrosionX, RemOil, CLP, etc. He included one I had never heard of, Eezox. It came out on top, just ahead of CorrosionX, which I was already using, and is some good stuff as well. So we got a quart can of it. Still have 3/4 of it. For all my smokeless guns, after cleaning I wipe them down with a thin coat of it.
Have a cheap Chinese air gun that I keep out in the barn for rats. That thing has been out there for as long as I’ve had the Eezox. No rust so far. And in Florida, that’s a big deal. It’s a tad moist down this way.
Downside to Eezox and CorrosionX: hard to find, and expensive, compared to some others…
-Red, not paid by Eezox…
I had to order it online. Ordered it through their website when I got it. I see it’s available at Amazon as well.Who sells it?
Show me in writing,I would lay odds that a lot of oldtimers used the heat from a fire to dry their M.L? They wern't stupid?
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