Hi, I hope everyone is doing well. This question may be more appropriate in the ‘general muzzleloading’ section as it’s about cleaning and rust prevention. However I don’t have this problem with my other muzzleloaders with standard rifling, so I submit it here.
I clean all of my arms, modern and historical, to a high standard. I shoot black powder only, no substitutes. I don’t use any petroleum products. My muzzleloading shotgun and longrifle clean easily and don’t rust in the bores. But this damned Whitworth is never really clean or rust-free and I don’t know what else to do about it.
I have a hexagonal patch jag to help get into the corners of the bore. I clean between shots with a moose-milk of soluble cutting oil and water. At home I clean with warm soapy water pumped through the barrel. I run a bore brush several times through it and then rinse. I use a couple of dozen absorbent flannel patches to clean and dry and oil. The next day I check and get several dirty and rust colour patches from the bore! I’ve tried several oils and all with about the same results. Ballistol and Hoppes oils seem to work better than others. As I said earlier, this cleaning regime works great on my other arms.
My P-H Whitworth #191 is a favourite of mine and I’ve never regretted buying it. However it is surely the most challenging and finicky firearm I’ve ever used. It’s hard to clean, hard to develop a load for and is very prone to misfires. I am more and more convinced that the historical stories about the amazing accuracy and long range efficacy of the Whitworth rifle are fabricated BS.
Okay, that was my rant. I needed to get that off my chest!
Getting back on topic, does anyone have some advice on cleaning and rust prevention that I haven’t mentioned?
Many thanks for your consideration.
I clean all of my arms, modern and historical, to a high standard. I shoot black powder only, no substitutes. I don’t use any petroleum products. My muzzleloading shotgun and longrifle clean easily and don’t rust in the bores. But this damned Whitworth is never really clean or rust-free and I don’t know what else to do about it.
I have a hexagonal patch jag to help get into the corners of the bore. I clean between shots with a moose-milk of soluble cutting oil and water. At home I clean with warm soapy water pumped through the barrel. I run a bore brush several times through it and then rinse. I use a couple of dozen absorbent flannel patches to clean and dry and oil. The next day I check and get several dirty and rust colour patches from the bore! I’ve tried several oils and all with about the same results. Ballistol and Hoppes oils seem to work better than others. As I said earlier, this cleaning regime works great on my other arms.
My P-H Whitworth #191 is a favourite of mine and I’ve never regretted buying it. However it is surely the most challenging and finicky firearm I’ve ever used. It’s hard to clean, hard to develop a load for and is very prone to misfires. I am more and more convinced that the historical stories about the amazing accuracy and long range efficacy of the Whitworth rifle are fabricated BS.
Okay, that was my rant. I needed to get that off my chest!
Getting back on topic, does anyone have some advice on cleaning and rust prevention that I haven’t mentioned?
Many thanks for your consideration.