Ok I read a great
long thread, and I've come out with this:
Barrel temperature is reduced, a big plus for people with thinner barrels or semi-autos. (velocity drops a bit too, but even with extra powder to get velocity back up the reduced friction should still keep temperatures lower than an uncoated bore)
Moly or TD makes bullets 'sleeker' because they don't get big 'fins' pressed into them by the rifling. That comes from da Germans, so it's got to vee precise. Sleeker=higher B/C
Moly-coated bullets do not coat a bore evenly. This means you have to shoot a bunch to get a bore coated. (this is wasted shots, and thus wasted money). And if it gets coated some parts could have more than others. Using bullets to spread moly around is just dumb and wasteful and not consistent. And there's concern that you could just be trapping fouling in layers, fouling and covering it with moly, and fouling and covering, and fouling...
The biggest concern is possible inconsistency.
You have to clean in a special way, "Berger's recommended cleaning method using JB and Kroil"
And over the course of a millenia the steel may be weakened by the moly compound.
So I guess the best thing is to use that Danzac stuff, and put it on a patch and run it down your bore after you've cleaned it, and just shoot plain bullets. This way you have consistency, the barrel is always coated evenly and predictably, and if it wears off or the barrel gets too dirty or something, and shots become erratic, then just clean and re-apply.
-more info:
Seems that with tungsten disulphide there will be little or no copper fouling, so there will be much less frequent need for any cleaning. And you don't want to remove it once it's on the barrel anyway.
(The lack of copper fouling makes sense, since the bullets aren't getting deformed and having 'fins' pressed into them.)
And some people have barrels with 7500 shots through them and are still looking good, using TD.
And I found a supplier, since that DANZAC thing is dead as a Dodo, and Sinclairs doesn't sell any TD coatings. Plus they're in Canada, so cheap shipping
http://www.lowerfriction.com/?gclid=CMv3hL7UwosCFQyBhgodOzIK_Q
Anyone want to split a 170kg drum? $30/kg, you can't beat that...
http://www.lowerfriction.com/?gclid=CMv3hL7UwosCFQyBhgodOzIK_Q
Oh yes, and you can buy just the powder and mix it with alcohol, which will evaporate away, for a great coating method!
Slightly OT:
I read that if you put a bit of moly on the trigger catch it will break much cleaner.