Nhoro
AH elite
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2014
- Messages
- 1,011
- Reaction score
- 1,946
- Location
- Harare,Zimbabwe
- Media
- 29
- Member of
- Cleveland Gun Club
- Hunted
- Zimbabwe
Hi all, had an interesting observation today. I bought a brno .22 that was made in 1948 and have been fixing it up. I was struggling to get it to group and so I started cleaning the barrel with solvents and bronze brushing. I probably soaked solvent 15 times for an hour or two each time. I managed 1" groups at 50 m and decided that was about all I could get.Barrel and action were rusted so I cleaned it up and started rust blueing. So after the boil, I brushed the bore with a bronze brush and it was full of black gunk. Put a patch through and even more carbon sludge came out. So my theory is the boil loosened the carbon better than the solvent. Anyone have a similar experience ? I reckon it is worth a boil if you have stubborn carbon or a rifle that hasn't been cleaned for a while. Totally subjective but the area of rifling in front of the chamberhas much crisper, sharper rifling than before.