Little Wattsy
69 Cal.
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2008
- Messages
- 3,631
- Reaction score
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Just bought some 91% yesterday at Walgreens for 1.99 and will try it this Saturday. Thanx forum :grin:
redwing said:Pouring water down a barrel if you shoot a lot is a very poor slow process.
Nope.Speaking of alcohol. I read somewhere that re-enactors use cotton balls soaked in alcohol? I did a search but couldn’t find anything about it. Anyone heard of this?
I’ve done it in a potato launcher with an electric striker and it works good. Other than that, nothing else.Nope.
I reenact. No one I know uses cotton balls soaked in alcohol.Speaking of alcohol. I read somewhere that re-enactors use cotton balls soaked in alcohol? I did a search but couldn’t find anything about it. Anyone heard of this?
Been using it for over 20 years with complete satisfaction.I have seen the use of alcohol for cleaning/drying a bore referenced here a lot. Can someone point out the benefits of using alcohol in the bore. Also, are we talking about "rubbing alcohol" or something else entirely? Thanks for the help! :hatsoff:
Been using it for over 20 years with complete satisfaction.
Use 70%, not 90%.
I like alcohol because it gets the patch grease out too.
A caveat is the dirty grease or oil you get out MUST be replaced with new lubricant.
Another advantage is that the alcohol evaporates on it’s own in about 30 to 45 seconds, eliminating the need to run extra patch down the bore to dry it.
I gave up the hot water thing over 45 years ago. Too much trouble if you shoot muzzleloaders as much as I have most of my life.
Cold water cleans just as good hot in my experience.
Ethyl AlcoholSkychief: Boy! I haven't seen that name for years but, that's another story.
Most of the people who use the word "alcohol" are refering to Isopropyl or ethanol (in its "denatured form) in their relatively pure forms.
Either of these will absorb water and they both dry very rapidly so either will help remove any water that may be in a guns bore.
Either one will also brake down any oils that have found their way into small places like the flame channel on a percussion gun. This helps prevent powder contamination which can cause problems.
Rubbing alcohol is very high in water content so it is not only weakened but its water content will do more harm than good.
Either Isopropyl or denatured alcohol can be purchased at most Hardware or paint stores.
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