Has anyone purchased and used these......comments?
Mucus
I'm so accustomed to this now that if I found something that took less work my conscience would probably bother me.
There has been a lot of negative comments about useing Bore Butter,but I still feel that as long as the cleaning and drying are done with care theres no problem.
Now for the stupid question. I use ML1000 and lubed patches and shoot only about 25 times every couple of weeks. I have not noticed any "buildup" and am not sure what to look for. Help me with this issue, please.
I use bore butter, I have nl 1000 but not much of it it and bore butter smell the same I'll bet they use the same ingrediants, the only time I have ever had a problem was when I ran a 40 grain blank charge down the bore, then I had problems with hard loading, but if you use bore butter or nl1000, after cleaning and drop your main charge down and lube with it I don't have any build up's, and cleaning is a lot easier and fast, I use it almost exclusively, except in my custom fayetteville I use msmlube to lube my mini balls , but use the borebuter to, preserve the barrel, seems to make loading eaiser and keeps fowling down :m2c:.
bb75
I use bore butter or ox-yoke as my primary patch lube and used to use it to protect my bore after cleaning. My .54-cal barrel has about 500-600 rounds through it, but it's only 1 year old. I used to use hot (never boiling) soapy water. Then I stopped using soap. Now I just use luke-warm or cool water, a bore brush (sometimes copper, sometimes mylon, and sometimes wrapped with a patch itself) to clean the bore, followed by LOTS of dry patches. After most of the water is out, I use Lehigh Valley lube to loosen up any residual fouling and then A LOT more dry patches. I was told by the guy who made my gun that too-hot water will loosen/extract the material that has collected in the pores in the metal, better known as "seasoning" and could lead to inaccuracy. Same potential accuracy problems but with exact opposite symptoms as build-up. I've never noticed buildup of any kind, but--only recently--have noticed a small amount of rust in the bore 2-3 weeks after this cleaning. I should note I've taken to using a hair dryer to blow-dry the bore and I leave the barrel in my gun cabinet over a Golden Rod. I never used any petroleum-based solvents to clean or protect the barrel until I started noticing this rust, which has me terrified that I'll ruin my bore condition. So I started using a light coat (one patch, run a few times down bore) of Birchwood-Casey Sheath Rust Preventative after all is clean and dry. I've heard not to use petroleum-based solvents for the same reasons to not use hot water. Anyone think I'm being stupid for using just cold water or using petroleum-based rust prevent?
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