On an older thread, many guys said that ballistol neutralizes corrosive primers. It’s easier to use in the field and blast the gas tube and piston too. Anyone use this product?
I've been using Ballistol for over 50 years to inhibit the effects of corrosive ammunition.
That's all it does, INHIBITS. It doesn't mean you don't need to strip and clean properly later.
It does allow a couple of days before you have to get at the chore, but that's it.
If you give your firearm a shot of Ballistol every day, it will alleviate the effects of corrosive ammo for about a week or so.
It doesn't matter one bit to a firearm if you only shoot one round or 200 rounds, if you don't dissolve the salts or contain them in some manner, the chemical reactions will cause rust and pitting on all of the surfaces the gas and residues touch.
This also means that the jacket fouling has to be cleaned out as well. The corrosive material will be covered over or pressed into the barrel steel by that jacket material and that really causes the major damage.
When I first started working at Lever Arms, in the early sixties, almost all of the ammunition we used to test a selected few rifles was corrosive. We basically only tested the worst of the shipments that came in. We would select the poorest, but still functional specimens and shoot them with the ammunition they were designed to shoot regularly. No blue pills, just general issue ammo.
To make a long story short, I had the advantage of shooting several makes, models, manufacturers of ammunition and firearms, from single shot muzzle stuffers to bolt actions, semi autos, revolvers and full autos from personal to crew served.
I found out very early that Ballistol, formulated just before WWI as a do all preservative and rust INHIBITOR was a great product, even if it does stink, but it was only a stop gap.
If you use Ballistol today, then don't clean it and shoot it again in a couple of days, you will start seeing rust within 8 hours, even if you coat the surfaces with Ballistol again, right after shooting.
It's like losing 50 pounds, it's all fine, until you start eating/exercising in the same manner before you tried to lose the weight.
IF YOU DON'T clean corrosive residues out of your bore, there is no way to stop the corrosion. It's a chemical reaction, between the salts and the metal. Floating the firearm in oil or grease may slow it down, but it won't stop it.
Save your money and get a spray bottle or just a squirt bottle full of water from your tap, instead of going through the hassle expense of Windex of any other ammonia based product. It's the water that does the deed and again, only for a short duration.
Ammonia does soften up and may even dissolve the jacket fouling if it's harsh enough. Don't confuse this with dissolving the corrosive materials in the propellant residues.