Distilled water is great and cheap. I use in in my car batteries, mix it with antifreeze and use it in my steam locomotive. Do not ever use deionized water! It is not the same as distilled water and can really cause issues. Repeated use will actually destroy the boiler for a model steam engine.
It's probably the chlorine in the city water. I always use filtered (Pur charcoal filter) hot water with some dish soap for cleaning and the same clear water for rinse. I then wipe dry with a patch or two and always follow up with a patch or two of WD-40 which displaces any residue moisture in the pores and groove corners.Just wanted to pass on a recent experience.
Every time I've ever cleaned with water that was any warmer than tepid I have experienced seeing flash rust on the first dry patch I run down the bore. (Brit, I know how trivial you feel flash rust is).
Quite a while back I remember reading someone say that they wondered if the reason some always see it and others don't may be because of additives to city water.
A week ago or so I went shooting. When I came home to clean, I had a jug of distilled water on hand, been meaning to try it and see if there was any difference.
I heated it up to boiling. Used half with a couple drops of dish soap to clean, then the other half for a rinse.
No flash rust this time. Only once so not a super remarkable experiment, but I'll be trying it again the next time I shoot. I just like how much quicker the barrel dries when I can use hot.
My wife suffers the same. Here is what we use for her bathing.I am severely allergic to chlorine. Therefore, it is difficult for me to use the bathtub or take a shower. I have to add all sorts of salts to the water to get rid of the severe itching after. Therefore, sometimes I boil water and bathe in it. In fact, this allergy manifested itself not so long ago when I moved to the city, before that I did not really notice anything like that. I used to love to lie in my bathtub after a workout in order to relax, but now it's all complicated.
70% isopropyl alcohol, followed by diluted Ballistol or some other oil. Diluted Ballistol only works well too, but the alcohol does a better job of getting any patch grease out of the breech area.Just wanted to pass on a recent experience.
Every time I've ever cleaned with water that was any warmer than tepid I have experienced seeing flash rust on the first dry patch I run down the bore. (Brit, I know how trivial you feel flash rust is).
Quite a while back I remember reading someone say that they wondered if the reason some always see it and others don't may be because of additives to city water.
A week ago or so I went shooting. When I came home to clean, I had a jug of distilled water on hand, been meaning to try it and see if there was any difference.
I heated it up to boiling. Used half with a couple drops of dish soap to clean, then the other half for a rinse.
No flash rust this time. Only once so not a super remarkable experiment, but I'll be trying it again the next time I shoot. I just like how much quicker the barrel dries when I can use hot.
There is no need to use hot or boiling water to clean your barrel. Room temperature is fine.Just wanted to pass on a recent experience.
Every time I've ever cleaned with water that was any warmer than tepid I have experienced seeing flash rust on the first dry patch I run down the bore. (Brit, I know how trivial you feel flash rust is).
Quite a while back I remember reading someone say that they wondered if the reason some always see it and others don't may be because of additives to city water.
A week ago or so I went shooting. When I came home to clean, I had a jug of distilled water on hand, been meaning to try it and see if there was any difference.
I heated it up to boiling. Used half with a couple drops of dish soap to clean, then the other half for a rinse.
No flash rust this time. Only once so not a super remarkable experiment, but I'll be trying it again the next time I shoot. I just like how much quicker the barrel dries when I can use hot.
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