crowkiller
32 Cal.
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2004
- Messages
- 38
- Reaction score
- 0
I use the tail hair from a whitetail buck.Doe hair is too soft.
paulvallandigham said:I find that using a cleaning patch, dampened lightly with spit, to clean my pan and frizzen, and flint of residue is fast, efficient, thorough, and I can use the other side of the patch to wipe down the bore before loading the next powder charge( FRUGAL!- I said, "FRUGAL"! :grin: :shocked2: :haha: )
For those of you who have a Curling Club near by.....those "brooms" used to sweep the ice ahead of the stones are natural bristle. The bristles are also pretty much the size you need for a pan brush, both in diameter and length. Scope out a dumpster there as there will often be discarded brooms in it. If the bristles start to loosen up or fall out, the broom is discarded as even a single hair lying on the ice can really screw up the stone movement! :nono:mudd turtle said:Where do you get natural fibers for the brush. Mudd Turtle. :surrender:
Where do you get natural fibers for the brush. Mudd Turtle.
Does work. I have a couple of pan brushes made using pig bristles from paint brushes made in China. They are many years old and holding up very well.FPDoc said:Lots of made in china "bristle" brushes sold as throw-aways for stain or in housewares at wally world for brushing butter on stuff. Might work.
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