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Using lubed wads or even smearing lube on top of the chambers makes cleanup WAY easierToday I shot and cleaned the '51 iNavy n both formats.
More firing cone trouble but did get off two cylinders full. Since using a heavily lubed 1/4" felt OP wad it was a four patch cleaning job. The cylinder soaked at the same time every thing else was cleaned.
The cylinder cleaned quickly using a cotton mop with the firing cones out.
More on the cones in another post as soon as I calm down.
The gun was fired 15 times as an unmentionable. Those bullets carry no lube at all. The reason I am mention an unmentionable is cleaning was long and difficult with crusty hard fouling even using soaking wet patches on the cleaning rod.
The percussion gun had only 5 less shots and was much easier to clean.
I suspect that hard crusty fouling was caused by not enough lube
Usually I use a 1/8' wad saturated with the Eras Gone (Mark Hubbs) recipe of
1 oz. unsalted lard and 4 oz Gulf Wax canning wax, These wads used the same formula. No oil never bleeds out.
Forget the formula that uses kumquat oil expressed from the fruit's rind picked by a 40 year old blond blue eyed virgin wearing a red thong bikini with a D cup top in the dark of the moon or some such concoction.
WATER simple water and soap or Ballistol.
Easy peasy
lemon squeezy
MAKE SMOKE
Grumpy Curmudgeon
Bunk
I use cheap dollar store baby wipes that are like 2 bucks per 100, on a cleaning rod and the bore comes clean with 2 baby wipes, max. Baby Wipes are basically soap and water anyway in a convenient package. I used them to clean weapons in the Army and they work for cap and ballers. I also used shaving cream to clean M16's but I haven't tried that yet on blackpowder weapons. I might have to now.
I also use rubbing alcohol on a patch because it contains water, and it self-dries everything to prepare for a layer of Eezox to keep rust away
Super easy. I don't like taking the internals out too often because the less I have to put a screwdriver in those butter soft screws that hold the grip frame on the better. Even with Grace screwdrivers, I'd rather not be constantly taking these things apart. Less is more.
Action Blaster is very helpful, it blows the action out then dries. A few drops of muzzleloader lube to oil the internals, Boom, done
Overcleaning can be as bad for a gun as undercleaning. People are out here scrubbing rifling out of mild steel revolver bores with stainless steel or bronze brushes, putting more wear on the rifling than 10,000 round balls but they need every spec of carbon out.
I have probably about 20 cap and ballers sitting at home right now with less than 100% clean chambers, some have been that way for over 10 years. There may be a little hint of crud in the bottoms of some, or some fouling here and there. No rust, no problems. I don't spend an hour sterilizing chambers, I get them mostly all the way clean with a jag. I don't need them to look out of the box clean every time. They might fail a Drill SGT inspection or a Sunday Inspection from a Sgt Major who disliked my face in 1863 but it's ok, I don't have to pass any of that.