A few years ago moly coated bullets were all the rage, now you don’t see them. The reason being is it embeds into the bore and take much scrubbing to remove. I have a 7mm Rem mag in which I learned that lesson on. Never again!
Umm yeah I meant old wagon open axle grease I did i did that’s the ticket. LolMolybdenum grease? Sounds rather NON-traditional to me. I would have thought that one of the moderators would have banned reference to it ;-)
One of these days I’ll tell you guys the nightmares I had scrubbing out a brand new CVA wolf in line muzzleloader.
There is some complex organic chemistry that turns petroleum products reacting with Real Black Gunpowder fouling into a very difficult to remove tar.
Nothing like a water based product to keep a black powder arm clean. Hot soapy water cleaned em like a whistle. No need for any fancy lubes on these babies.To get back on subject as far as molybdenum grease is concerned, it is the medium and not the moly.
Petroleum oils and greases do not work well with real Black Gun Powder residue.
There is some complex organic chemistry that turns petroleum products reacting with Real Black Gunpowder fouling into a very difficult to remove tar.
Please do not ask me how I know.
It was embarrassing...six brass bristle brushes later something was learned.
Bunk
Please don't. Discussion of that kind of gun is not welcome on this forum.
I can dig it! Warmer climate must be like trying to seal the chamber with ice cream. That is one of my worries even up here in Michigan we do have hotter days.Read through all the posts wondering about climate being mentioned.
Lard or oil and beeswax mixtures that work great up by the Great Lakes leave something to be desired (and the chamber mouths) in warmer climes.
Sounds good to me. I’m the same 100 plus degrees and I’m inside. That’s why I moved from California to Michigan.Molybdenum as a lubricant doesn't become effective until way past the temperature that the grease it is contained in fails. You'll never get a gun that hot unless it's a machine gun with a truckload of ammo. So there is no benefit to using it.
Beeswax and olive oil mix will withstand temperatures above 100 degrees, hotter than I can stand to be shooting in. It just needs to me mixed in the proper proportions. I have one mix for winter and one for summer.
Goop or GoJo hand cleaner melts Black Powder and Pyrodex fouling. I live in a dry climate after cleaning my cap and ball revolvers with it leaves them lightly oiled no rust. I carry a small squeeze bottle of it to put a little on top of the loaded balls. Keeps the barrel clean. Keeps cylinder pins and arbors free of fouling no binding accuracy is great.
Gojo works on a lot of stuff, hands, golf balls, rakes and hoes, because it has a lot of pumice in it it works like a sandblaster. without the blowing air.
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