This is not correct. KCl (and various other salts in there) is water soluble and "ammonia", aka the household variety of aqueous ammonium hydroxide is mostly water. I think the theory is that household ammonia evaporates faster than regular room temp water. It does nothing to "neutralize" salts.
Incidently that is why you use hot water. So it evaporates.
Yeah, I misspoke there. The salts are dissolved in the water in the windex. Not neutralized. Except perhaps in the sense that once they have run out on the ground, they are no longer a threat.
But it does seem to me that windex does a pretty good cleaning job of all the black crap that comes from the dirty Bulgarian ammo I am working on burning up. Maybe it is my imagination. Or maybe I have watched "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" one too many times.
There are many ways to skin a cat. I just know I like to get the worst of it cleaned up right at the range, and then clean and oil properly once I get home.
When at home I will even often take the bolt, piston, rod, spring, etc and wash it in hot soapy water in the sink, and then rinse it with boiling water out of the kettle. I honestly don't understand the paranoia about using water on a gun. They don't call it the universal solvent for no reason.




















































