How

Found this on Google...

Bypass the chemicals with a homemade solution of baking soda and water for cleaning the lacquer from small brass objects.
Bring water to a boil in a pot large enough to submerge your brass item(s). Add baking soda at the rate of 2 tbsp. per quart of water.
Place your brass object in the boiling water and allow it to simmer for 15 minutes..

* also, have you tried laquer thinner...???

:confused:
 
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Yep
The laquers there fore a reason.
Let it do it's job. Making steel cases have more reliable feeding and corrosion resistance.
It doesn't bother my VZ or SKS any why would you mess with that?
Just use a good plastic solvent to clean the bore and chamber after shooting corrosive laquered. I use Ed's red with a good dose of acetone.
It'll melt the plastic like nobody's business.
 
IIRC, laquer thinner should take laquer paint right off. If memory serves, laquer does not dry in the same way that enamel does. It remains able to be redissolved by it's original chemical base.
 
IIRC, laquer thinner should take laquer paint right off. If memory serves, laquer does not dry in the same way that enamel does. It remains able to be redissolved by it's original chemical base.
Yes, lacquer thinner will dissolve lacquer. Better wear a respirator with organic vapour cartridges and use rubber gloves. Those disposable nitrile gloves won't last at all.
 
I'll add this to the sillyest things I have read on CGN ;)

Same here.

Talk about time wasters. Tumbling live rounds? Exposing them to chemicals? All to remove something that militaries around the Eastern bloc used... in their Eastern bloc weapons... which we are also using?

:bangHead:
 
:confused:
I wonder what this is used for???
13-354copy-155x336.jpg


:confused:
I also wonder if you use this in side your chamber with the above said product what it would do???
M14_CHAMBER_BRUSH_001.JPG
 
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