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Gun Cleaning Confusion

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perpster

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Oct 22, 2005
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Back when I first became introduced to gun cleaning about 20 years ago, there was solvent and there was oil. Now I read that one liquid does it all: cleaning, lubricating and rust protection. Can this be true??

I want to give my firearms, knives and axes the best cleaning and rust protection possible. It seems odd to me that one substance can both clean shooting by-products AND and prevent rust. I am under the impression that a solvent is needed to clean a gun after shooting, and that an oil is needed to lubricate metal-to-metal friction points and to protect from rust. Have I missed some technological developments in the last 20 years? My standard Hoppes kit has a SOLVENT and an OIL. Is this no longer needed; can one substance do it all?
 
I'd like an answer to that one too! One thing I noticed on the Hoppe's #9 now is that they recommend running a saturated patch down the barrel when you're done cleaning to "protect" it until you shoot it the next time. So I guess it's a one-stop shop thing also.
 
can one substance do it all?

Yes. But I will not buy a store bought cleaner any more.

I made my own all in one cleaner and lube by modifying Ed’s Red bore cleaner.

I used the following:

25% (K1) Kerosene
25% Mineral Spirits
25% Acetone
25% Power steering fluid.

I used power steering fluid instead of Dextron transmission fluid because I can’t stand the smell of Dextron tranny fluid.

It works very well. Shake well, then drop in your handgun (grips removed) let it soak a few minutes. I used a partially filled empty (new) gallon paint can. Remove scrub with a toothbrush, pipe cleaners, bore brush and swabs as needed. Rinse by re-dunking. Blow off with compressed air or let air dry (all the solvents will evaporate leaving only the oil). Wipe off the outside really well with a lint free cloth. Re-assemble and you’re done.

The bore comes clean after using a wet brush, one wet and one dry swab using a jag. I shoot WWB from Wally World.

The formula holds up well for a full IDPA match and doesn’t smell bad at all. In fact I can’t detect an odor at all.

YMMV
 
No one product will be the best for both uses, but as long as you stick to non-corrosive ammo, BreakFree CLP will fill the bill pretty good. Ed's Red is a great bore cleaner, I'm not entirely convinced on it being a good lubricant, however.
For my own guns, many of which are milsurp and shoot corrosive, I use Sweet's 7.62 Bore Solvent for cleaning, and BreakFee CLP for lubrication, except for subzero conditions, then I reclean spotless and use powdered Graphite for lube.
 
And the moral to this story is: Almost anything will work, even some pretty goofy recipes.

I still think that several things work better than one. Hoppe's #9 to remove powder residue from the bore, Sweet's for copper, Breakfree for general cleaning, lubrication, and protection, and MiliTec grease for locking lugs and slide rails. If there is a good all-in-one, I would vote for Breakfree.
 
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