Anyone know a good way to add a thin amount of bore butter to 100s of patches all at once?
Melt your lube to a liquid,
THATS a good idea for wiping out between shots I LIKE the plastic bag trickMy wife uses moose milk. She puts her patches in a plastic bag that is inside a leather bag. She pours in moose milk until the patches are wet. At the range, she reaches in and pulls a patch that is ready to go down the bore.
Melt your lube to a liquid,
THATS a great way ..i like this its faster.and thats what iam doing with a holesaw that i took the teeth off by grinding then sharpened it.POUNDING it through folded material into a stump of soft wood.My method works as follows: Cut my patches with a sharpened hole cutter. Place twenty to twenty five patches on a piece of cardboard. Put a dab of bore butter in the middle of each patch. Put in the microwave for 30-40 seconds. The lube will melt and spread across the patches. They will be hot to the touch. Then I pile up the patches in a stack and put them between the jaws of a Quick Grip bar clamp and squeeze. In a minute or two, the lube is equally distributed throughout the whole pile, edge to edge. Any excess is squeezed out for re-use. Put the lubed patches in a pharmacy bill bottle and cap. Twenty five is about the right number for a range visit or match. Repeat until finished.
ADK Bigfoot
YEAH thats a good idea..i have it down to doing ALOT in a few minutes.I got some great ideas from hereI use a hole punch ($12 on Amazon) in a drill press, punch wads out of 1/8" wool felt and soak them in olive oil. A little messy to use but what isn't in this corner of the shooting sports? Keep a hand towel around. They get stored in small ziplocks and work very well in keeping fouling soft. The rifle is very accurate using them as overpowder wads under a R.E.A.L.
wm
My method works as follows: Cut my patches with a sharpened hole cutter. Place twenty to twenty five patches on a piece of cardboard. Put a dab of bore butter in the middle of each patch. Put in the microwave for 30-40 seconds. The lube will melt and spread across the patches. They will be hot to the touch. Then I pile up the patches in a stack and put them between the jaws of a Quick Grip bar clamp and squeeze. In a minute or two, the lube is equally distributed throughout the whole pile, edge to edge. Any excess is squeezed out for re-use. Put the lubed patches in a pharmacy bill bottle and cap. Twenty five is about the right number for a range visit or match. Repeat until finished.
ADK Bigfoot
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I use to melt bore butter in the microwave and lube up the patches, but switched to moose milk after seeing bore butter patches smoldering in the grass. I don't want no fire starting by me in warm weather. Still use bore butter in the winter. Several replies posted that have good advice.Anyone know a good way to add a thin amount of bore butter to 100s of patches all at once?
Well I try and keep things as simple as I can. I simply melt my lube, which ever I am using at the time, and with a pair of large twizers or weinnie tongs, I dip a rolled up strip of patching material in the lube. I squeeze out the excess lube and place the roll on a piece of paper towel to dry. I then either cut them in squares or cut at the muzzle. Works for me !Anyone know a good way to add a thin amount of bore butter to 100s of patches all at once?
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