I have read a lot of posts lately about "electronic" barrel cleaning and such. I'm not a big fan of having an electrolyte and potential in my barrels, but being an Engineer by trade and familiar with electoplating and electrostripping I decided to run an experiment to see for myself.
It is an easy setup, I won't go into details as there is tons of info online.
Anyway, to make a long story short, it works!
I used the electrolyte solution posted by others, i.e. 2 parts water (RO or distilled would be the better choice), 1 part white vinegar and 1 part household ammonia.
The potential you apply to the setup is most important: I have read about people using rectifiers, universal chargers, etc, 3-5 Volts.
From my experiment, it is best for the barrel to use a 1.5V battery; I used 2 and I ran them in parallel, therefore more 'juice'.
I metered the current through the system: it is low @ 1.5V, starts at about 100mA then as copper is removed drops steady.
I let it run for 30 minutes, took the rod out, cleaned it, replaced the electrolyte and ran it for another 30 minutes. At the end, amperage dropped to 8mA, insignificant. I would estimate that at least 80% of the copper fouling was removed.
Conclusions: if you do it, DO NOT use more than 1.5V! Higher voltage will damage your rifling, i.e. round the edges on the lands.
Make sure the barrel is connected to the Anode (+) and the steel rod to the Cathode (-)
I experimented with the batteries in series, i.e. 3 volts and the current
rised to 1A! Enough to polish your bore and round any edge!
PS: Oh, I was forgetting this: this method will not clean the gunk in your barrel, just the copper and lead. Urban legend has it that it will leave the barrel shiny... BS! Yes it will if you take your time and use the brush and the cleaning solutions as they shoul. All the black crap coming out with the electrolyte and deposited on the rod and barrel are salts and oxides from the electro-chemical reactions, not the gunk in the barrel.
Copper fouling transferred to the steel electrode:
Current reading when started
Midway, after electrolyte change
Finished
It is an easy setup, I won't go into details as there is tons of info online.
Anyway, to make a long story short, it works!
I used the electrolyte solution posted by others, i.e. 2 parts water (RO or distilled would be the better choice), 1 part white vinegar and 1 part household ammonia.
The potential you apply to the setup is most important: I have read about people using rectifiers, universal chargers, etc, 3-5 Volts.
From my experiment, it is best for the barrel to use a 1.5V battery; I used 2 and I ran them in parallel, therefore more 'juice'.
I metered the current through the system: it is low @ 1.5V, starts at about 100mA then as copper is removed drops steady.
I let it run for 30 minutes, took the rod out, cleaned it, replaced the electrolyte and ran it for another 30 minutes. At the end, amperage dropped to 8mA, insignificant. I would estimate that at least 80% of the copper fouling was removed.
Conclusions: if you do it, DO NOT use more than 1.5V! Higher voltage will damage your rifling, i.e. round the edges on the lands.
Make sure the barrel is connected to the Anode (+) and the steel rod to the Cathode (-)
I experimented with the batteries in series, i.e. 3 volts and the current
rised to 1A! Enough to polish your bore and round any edge!
PS: Oh, I was forgetting this: this method will not clean the gunk in your barrel, just the copper and lead. Urban legend has it that it will leave the barrel shiny... BS! Yes it will if you take your time and use the brush and the cleaning solutions as they shoul. All the black crap coming out with the electrolyte and deposited on the rod and barrel are salts and oxides from the electro-chemical reactions, not the gunk in the barrel.


Copper fouling transferred to the steel electrode:


Current reading when started

Midway, after electrolyte change

Finished

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