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The Range
Firearms Chat
What is Your Cleaning Routine?
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<blockquote data-quote="big green chopper" data-source="post: 3664177" data-attributes="member: 46480"><p>For many years, I did as I was taught, clean everything with CLP after shooting. Now days, I clean less but when I do I don't mess around. I strip, throw the parts in a bucket of solvent get out my 100% brass brushes and fire up the air compressor. I run solvent down the barrel and do a wet bore brush then blow it out with the air hose. Pull my parts out, brush them, blow them dry with the air hose, slap a couple drops of CLP on the friction points. Then I re-visit the barrel with a clean patch with some CLP just to leave a light film for storage. OH yeah, and I use q-tips for the gas ports in the bcg and bolt. The brass never leaves a mark. The solvent is safe for nitride and NMC finishes, and my BC and Bolt never get scratched up to accommodate more carbon build up. There are a couple rifles I have that need more and less cleaning. Gas guns almost always need more.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="big green chopper, post: 3664177, member: 46480"] For many years, I did as I was taught, clean everything with CLP after shooting. Now days, I clean less but when I do I don't mess around. I strip, throw the parts in a bucket of solvent get out my 100% brass brushes and fire up the air compressor. I run solvent down the barrel and do a wet bore brush then blow it out with the air hose. Pull my parts out, brush them, blow them dry with the air hose, slap a couple drops of CLP on the friction points. Then I re-visit the barrel with a clean patch with some CLP just to leave a light film for storage. OH yeah, and I use q-tips for the gas ports in the bcg and bolt. The brass never leaves a mark. The solvent is safe for nitride and NMC finishes, and my BC and Bolt never get scratched up to accommodate more carbon build up. There are a couple rifles I have that need more and less cleaning. Gas guns almost always need more. [/QUOTE]
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