I am another rimfire shooter that stays away from Bore Snakes.
I do not own any rimfires that I cannot clean from the breech,
using a guide, so am not forced to clean any from the muzzle end.
Dave.
Just not sure how you can use a guide with a BL22
I am another rimfire shooter that stays away from Bore Snakes.
I do not own any rimfires that I cannot clean from the breech,
using a guide, so am not forced to clean any from the muzzle end.
Dave.
I don't have a BL22, but for many of my guns I use string trimmer wire - the nylon cutting cord you find on the head of a weed-eater. Cut at an angle on one end and melt the other end to blunt it. Stab whatever size/thickness of patch you need over the angled end and away you go.
There's no way the nylon cord can damage your rifle, 40ft of the stuff is $5 at a hardware store, and it coils up very nicely to store/transport.
It's a conundrum.
- .22s tend to foul up the works
- They suggest not dismantling Browning BL22s
- Bore guides don't work with this LA
- I'd prefer to clean from the muzzle last
- The .22 snake is almost impossible to feed thru even after lubricating with bore cleaner
Yikes
They are a pita to reassemble.
The ejector and it spring are a real aggravation to get in place when reinstalling the bolt.
The locking piece can be assembled in different ways, but only one works.
The 9422 and 39A are simple in comparison.
I don't own a BL-22, and don't want one. But if I did, I would clean the bore using either an Otis or a rod. Insert from the muzzle, apply patch at the breech, pull through to the muzzle.
Then there is the issue of cleaning the action. I suppose that it could be flushed out with solvent, but a detailed cleaning requires disassembly. Just a pain to reassemble.
I had to work on enough customers' guns to help me decide that I didn't want one.
Is it true that trimmer cord is impregnated with abrasive to help it cut better?