Clean or dirty precision rifle?

LongRangeJunkie

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How often do you clean your precision rifle? After every shooting session is what some say and something I follow but I'm curious to what is done on precision rifles. I've heard some fire 500 rounds before cleaning their bolt guns. The reason I clean my guns after every shooting session regardless of one casing spent or 100 is that my rifles sit awhile between shooting sessions so I clean for storage so to speak.

Looking for what the majority of you all do with you 1 moa bolt guns or better. Thanks !

KB :sniper:
 
The 223 gets a "cleaning" @ 150 rounds+. The 308 will get a "cleaning" when it quits shooting accurately, likely around 300+.

"Cleaning" ...a little Hoppes on a copper brush, 10 strokes and then a dry patch through 5 times. then a "clean cold bore" validation shot.

Good until it tells me to clean it again.
 
I used to clean religiously when i didn't know any better. What I thought was a good thing (cleaning regularity), actually, made things worse off.

Every time your ram something down your barrels throat, you run the risk of scarring or doing something to damage it along the way. chemicals used are sometimes potent, and are hard on finishes, because sooner or later some will get on that nice shiny hardwood stock and leave its mark. I've seen so many overlubed guns its not even funny, and over oiling can be worse than not enough. And those 3 peice rods that come in a kit are your barrels worst enemy.

I have pretty well dropped cleaning to about a once a year ritual now, unless something has reared its head to say otherwise. Shotguns, .22's, hunting rifle, and the level of cleaning will vary with the use of the firearm. IE, my hunting rifle only see's a boresnake or an almost dry/very lightly oiled patch down the barrel pre-season, as it's not fired a whole lot and the barrel needs to stay fouled for shots to count. My .22 might get 5000 rounds in a summer, so it's gets a complete breakdown. Shotgun may vary if it's been in the swamp or not, usually just a strip down and blow out with an Airgun. Got an SKS that shoots corrosive ammo, think I cleaned it once, ever. Still has yet to seize up.

For my precision rifle, it also falls under the once a year program for a though cleaning, and the barrel only when needed during the season. I find it shoots well into the 400 round count before accuracy begins to degrade any. Even then it's not much, and could push it to 500 I'm certain and still be inside the 1" circle.

Cleaning is always done with a coated one peice rod, proper sized jags and brushes, bore guide and known solvents like butch' bore guide, hopp's oil and rem oil. Always wipe stuff down with a silicon cloth when I'm putting things away for an extended time or they have been exposed to moisture (ie hunting rifle).
 
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I will only clean the barrel with some wipe out when I see groups open up. But, I always clean the action and bolt face. Then lightly relube. It averages around 250 to 300 rounds. YRMV
 
Know your barrel... that is really the only advice that works. Some need to be clean or cleaned on a certain rd count. others only work when a bunch of shots have fouled up the bore.

For competition, know how the barrel reacts if it sits for a day or two. Some powders leave a cake about 1/3 down the bore.. is this a problem? Test to find out.

If you clean, how many rds to get back into tune and where do those first shots need to go to hit center....2rds, 3rds, 6 rds... you need to know.

I clean as little as possible to maintain accuracy for the given tasks the next day.

For storage or if things get dirty/wet, you do what you need to protect the bore and rifle.... but you better know what it takes to get that bore back to where it likes to be.

Test, test, and test again with good notes and identify what the bore needs.

Jerry
 
Jerry is right - barrel dependant. After some testing, I found it was better to clean it then just shoot, usually one or two shots were enough to get me to the sweet spot. Some guys only clean at the end of the season. I don't think there is one right answer.
 
I used to clean after 50-60 rounds. Now like others have said I clean when groups open up. Recently got a RBROS 6.5X47. RBROS told me the same thing; They don't clean sometimes until 2500+ rounds on the 6.5X47.
 
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