Can I clean and lube my pistols with Hoppe's 9

The reason I bought CLP is because that's what the gunsmith at SIG Sauer uses and he recommended it to me personally. This was during a recent SIG event at a gun store. I take an opinion like that to heart.
 
M14's and AR's both run better with grease than oil.
Especially the M14....I use synthetic wheel brg grease.

The important thing is to put the lube where it needs to be and wipe it away from where it does not.
Lube anywhere other than where it is doing its job for moving parts to interface is just making a mess and collecting powder and other substances into a mess.

Every type of gun is different and has different lube requirements/points.

Simply slathering lube everywhere is not only messy but counterproductive and will gunk things up to the point of FTF......

This is for lubrication for shooting.
Storage is a different matter and long term storage a different matter again.
Cleaning yet another matter.

Enviroment and or temps also factor in.
Some guns are very sensitive to temps...to the point of needing to be run nearly dry and or with an entirely different approach altogether.
Some are unaffected.

Cost is an issue for some as well....you don't need to spend the value of the gun on lubes/potions/snake oils and high techery.....it sometimes makes the job easier and often makes the owner feel good about things...but it isn't nec to spend huge $$ on lubes or cleaners.

There's no one answer....too many types of guns, enviroments, ammo types etc. Don't overthink it.....or overspend on it...or overlube it... :)
 
WD40 is not a lubricant. Better use a thin grade oil if you do not have the recommended lubricant. I find Ballistol a good general use CLP. I use Copperzilla to clean a fouled barrel. WD40 is also a good pre-soak for barrels. Then few brush passes, followed by patch, then a CLP moistened patch t finish. Some ads promotes Froglube to be the best non-toxic CLP. Maybe in warmer regions.

So funny. I have owned some of my firearms for up to 40 years and I use wd40 and Canadian tire, engine storage spray and even some Mobil 1, 5 W 30 mixed in. Always go bang and NEVER any rust on my guns(until I let someone borrow one). Engines run at hundreds of degrees for hours on end and last for years on 10w30...
 
Clean with this:

Hoppe_s_Solvent.jpg



Lubricate with this:

Hoppe_s_Lube.jpg


They are both very different products.
 
It's ignored because Grant is a douchebag and few people can stand listening to him, but in this case he actually presents some decent info.
But he's wrong about WD40 not being a lubricant as many, including WD40 themselves have spoken about. It's not a great lubricant, but it works perfectly for my uses on a gun, which is to wash out the dissolved carbon after using brakeclean to blast into my guns on the rare occasion I clean them. I also use it to re-wet the metal surfaces after using the brakeclean and compressed air to clean out the gun. Then I wipe down the gun, and lube properly. I hate grease on guns because it just traps debris and ####. I've been using oil for lube in environments from hot deserts with sand and wind to pouring rain/snowing and running my guns hard. Never ever had an issue with just using oil. And even in the sand and heat, the only time I cleaned my Shadow was after tripping and driving the gun a foot into the sand in the middle of a stage, shook out what I could finished the stage and then soaked it with oil, shook it off, wiped it down, finished the match, and then finally cleaned it. tons of fun. People really overthink this. sewing machines see more wear and tear than even hard shot guns, engines exponentially more. Look what they use, grease on rotating parts like bearings and oil on the sliding parts. Which is the exact opposite of GC.
 
^^^^on the WD40 as a lube.
I remember a guy at the range shooting hundreds of rounds out of a Browning belt fed, and the only thing that kept it running was WD40. It's not a super lube for sure, but it lubes enough and washes away gunk.

Balistol is a nice lube and preservative, but it smells like ass combined with rotten feet.
 
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I don't use WD40 at the range anymore after having it cause a breech flash/explosion in a 22lr semi rifle. Sprayed my arms and face with hot oily powder residue. Was lucky I was wearing glasses. It's too violate, you can set that stuff off just by striking the can. Google it.

M
 
You clean your pistols Slavex????:sok2
I've used WD40 at work at times for its intended purpose, water displacement and penetrating fluid but I've never used it on my firearms. There are better products on the market for both industrial and domestic use. The last while I've been using food grade oils, cleaners and penetrate on my guns. I've handled enough nasty chemicals in my occupation to continue that use into retirement.
 
yeah I clean them when the carbon build up stops the mags from going in.
WD40 for rewetting the metal and washing out the loose gunk works great. I wouldn't use it as a lube unless it was the end of the world. I have also used it after a match in the rain to wash out water that may have gotten inside parts.
 
I definitely agree with this one!

yeah I clean them when the carbon build up stops the mags from going in.
WD40 for rewetting the metal and washing out the loose gunk works great. I wouldn't use it as a lube unless it was the end of the world. I have also used it after a match in the rain to wash out water that may have gotten inside parts.
 
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