went and ordered a bore guide and a good cleaning rod. with everyones advice on this thread and too many google hours. ive decided to just clean with a power solvent like hoppes9 and patches between shots for the brake in. i know it won't remove the copper but it will apparently get rid of things the get knocked loose during the first few shots. more aggressive cleaning may be better but id rather do less and not risk screwing it up considering im still pretty green at this. this whole thing has been a way bigger learning curve then i thought it would be but im not complaining. thanks again.
Damage attributed to cleaning occurs only with the use of poor or poor fit equipment and/or bad technique.More good barrels have been ruined by over cleaning
Damage attributed to cleaning occurs only with the use of poor or poor fit equipment and/or bad technique.
I just want to add a thank you for some of the comments.
I do not break my barrels in but I will buy the copper removing solution. I have learned that .22 cal competition shooters do not use copper jacketed .22s. I bought thousands of copper jacketed CCI .22s that were on sale. I’m curious to see how much blue
Is on those patches.
after some reading on the wipe out product i can see why it has such a following. i could see using that for a gentle barrel brake in. some of the brake in info ive found suggests 10 to 20 passes with a brush after each shot.
Those .22lr rounds are not jacketed, they are copper washed, and at 22lr velocities, copper fouling isn't an issue.
The problem with Wipe Out, is that it is way too slow to use when shooting at the bench. It takes hours to remove the copper that KG-12 will remove in minutes.




























