A hypothetical: If one has a case that fits the gun that is airtight and watertight, then one could store the gun in there with a drying agent and a oxygen removal agent, and the gun would need to be cleaned as infrequently as a gun that never sees corrosive ammunition.
You know most SKSs have chrome-lined bores, right?
I've never used boiling water, I just scrub and use solvent.
I'm not sure about the non-corrosive ammo thing. Doesn't seem like it would get the gas system very well.
Boil a kettle of water, use a funnel and pour 2/3 of it through the bore and the rest into the gas block, then clean as normal.
Easy as falling off a log.
Usually I've got the bolt/carrier assembly out of the gun, sometimes not. At minimum you need to remove the upper handguard and piston.
I dont think it is a question of if we hate cleaning ours guns its just sometimes a pain in the ass to have to do it the minute you get home for fear of rust, and to not have the luxury of leaving it until you can sit down with a cup of coffee and enjoy the whole experience, i don't shoot corrosive ammo through alot of my guns just because i don't have the time to clean them right afterwards so anything to maybe postponed that is a blessing in my opinion, so thank you for all of the tips
It takes me about 5 minutes.
Strip it down, remove the piston, etc.
Lay everything out on your "dirty" towel. Take hot water from your tap, and put it into a measuring cup or a squeeze bottle (I use a squeeze-bottle like one you'd see fast-food condiments in; $2.99 @ a Real Canadian Wholesale for a bigass clear squeeze bottle). Squeeze/pour a healthy dose into the gas tube, filling it and letting it overflow. This will back-wash the gas tube salts into the bore and out the muzzle. Do this over your sink, obviously.
Then, fill with fresh hot water (or if it's hot enough, just keep going) and squeeze the rest of the bottle through the bore. Put your lips around the gas tube and blow out the "drop" that will stick in the gas port because of surface tension.
If the water was hot enough, you'll have a pretty warm barrel/gas tube assembly. Set it aside to dry (on a clean towel), which it should in short order. Wipe the outside if you like; wipe the inside with dry patches if you like.
Run your piston under running tap hot water, and scrub the carbon out of the grooves if it's piling up. Set it aside to dry too (clean towel), which will go much faster if you just wipe it dry first.
Clean and oil the rest of the mechanism while this happens (I find there's not too much blowback through the action into the bolt/carrier, but I give it some love anyway - Breakfree CLP is what I use, but just use whatever you oil the gun with). Takes just a few minutes, and you're waiting for the barrel/gas tube to dry anyway.
Now that your upper assembly is dry, run one oiled patch through the barrel. LEAVE THE GAS TUBE 100% DRY.
Reassemble.
Done.
-M
HOLY THREAD REVIVING BATMAN!?! Last post before yours was almost 1.5 YEARS before.
I truly enjoy disassembling and cleaning my rifle after every corrosive shoot. I'm lucky I dont have an issue with it, because with the price of ammunition for this thing, I can afford to shoot it as much as I want, whenever I want. Sometimes I just shoot to bring up the round count.