- Location
- Where the sun shines
Alright, so my brother and myself did some gopher popping today. Plenty of fun; the little buggers were running around everywhere and duly exploding under the expert care of my brother with his old Nylon 66, and myself with my newly dolled up, 70-year old Cooey Model 39 single-shot.
4 hours of splattering later, and we're heading home. Me being the firearms expert of the family, he asks if I would mind taking his Nylon 66 home to take it apart and give it a good cleaning all 'round, because he was having some trouble with cycling today. No problem, I enjoy taking a rifle apart to give it a clean and I hadn't had a chance to examine his Nylon in well-on ten years.
After I popped open the lid... I have to say it doesn't look like he's ever done more than occasionally oiled the action and swabbed the barrel. The thing is packed full of caked-on carbon and debris. I am actually having a hard time finding the METAL on the bolt; it may have been eaten away years ago and the carbon has simply filled in the space, like how a bone fossilizes.
I was expecting a relaxing two or three hours making sure everything was nicely functional and in tip-top form for the next round of squishy gopher treats. Turns out this is going to take me a lot longer, particularly since I'm... not entirely sure just where to start. I need to clean out everything, and I mean everything; the barrel has the stuff caked on, the receiver cover, the bolt, even the frame of the rifle itself has some serious cleaning to be done... and this is all a fair bit more than myself, a can of WD40 and some rags can really do.
So... Can I put this stuff in for a good soak in hot soapy water for a bit? I know that is a regular trick for cleaning out the Ruskie rifles when dealing with the corrosive ammo, so will this be a suitable method to make a dent in the grime so I can go at it with a brush later?
4 hours of splattering later, and we're heading home. Me being the firearms expert of the family, he asks if I would mind taking his Nylon 66 home to take it apart and give it a good cleaning all 'round, because he was having some trouble with cycling today. No problem, I enjoy taking a rifle apart to give it a clean and I hadn't had a chance to examine his Nylon in well-on ten years.
After I popped open the lid... I have to say it doesn't look like he's ever done more than occasionally oiled the action and swabbed the barrel. The thing is packed full of caked-on carbon and debris. I am actually having a hard time finding the METAL on the bolt; it may have been eaten away years ago and the carbon has simply filled in the space, like how a bone fossilizes.
I was expecting a relaxing two or three hours making sure everything was nicely functional and in tip-top form for the next round of squishy gopher treats. Turns out this is going to take me a lot longer, particularly since I'm... not entirely sure just where to start. I need to clean out everything, and I mean everything; the barrel has the stuff caked on, the receiver cover, the bolt, even the frame of the rifle itself has some serious cleaning to be done... and this is all a fair bit more than myself, a can of WD40 and some rags can really do.
So... Can I put this stuff in for a good soak in hot soapy water for a bit? I know that is a regular trick for cleaning out the Ruskie rifles when dealing with the corrosive ammo, so will this be a suitable method to make a dent in the grime so I can go at it with a brush later?


















































