Currently waiting for my PAL to be completed and sent back, so I'm trying to get ahead of what gear and accessories I will eventually need. When cleaning your SKS is using a gun cleaner like G96 enough to combat the corrosive salt deposits?
Currently waiting for my PAL to be completed and sent back, so I'm trying to get ahead of what gear and accessories I will eventually need. When cleaning your SKS is using a gun cleaner like G96 enough to combat the corrosive salt deposits?
Windex with amonia will clean and remove any salts , I spray it in the barrel and run the snake right after shooting , then clean and good oil after I get home , mineral spirits to clean off the original cosmoline , works great , quick and easy,
Gunzilla effectively removes carbon, copper, lead, rust, black powder, and plastic particles left from shotgun sabots/wads. Most cleaners soften carbon but it still must be scraped or scrubbed off a gun. Gunzilla’s unique formula breaks the bonds of the carbon molecules and turns them into a sludge-like liquid. It also neutralizes and cleans the residue left by corrosive primers. In black powder guns Gunzilla eliminates using water to clean and oil to lubricate. Just clean the black powder gun with Gunzilla and then you are done.
Gunzilla CLP is the only stuff I know of that claims it neutralises corrosive primers... Also completely non-hazardous.
Gunzilla is not the only one there.(http://ballistol.com/uses/firearm-cleaning-lubricant/) "Ballistol cleans and removes all types of bore fouling. Cleaning with Ballistol will save you time, minimize the need for brushing, and also form a protective film on your firearm. Due to its slight alkalinity, Ballistol neutralizes and dissolves black powder and corrosive ammo residue]. Ballistol is compeltely natural product, definitely non-hazardous. Ballistol is also CLP. So there are at least two. I've been using Ballistol for a few years with excellent results. Never ever had any rust on mu guns.
Stop spreading that BS about windex. Its why so many people damage their SKS.
You need to flush the salts out with liquids. A spray of windew wont be enough. Boil a kettle of water or do what i do and bring it in the shower and spray it.
With that same logic, Infidel, don't EVER wash your car !!!
I never do!
Honestly though, I'm talking about the effects of hot water on bare metal. Cars have protective anti rusting coating on them to impede rust. (If they're even made of metal anymore). Heat increases the pore size of metal, making it more porous and increases the reaction time of oxidation. That's why vehicles washed and left in a warm garage rust faster than vehicles washed and left outside.
Addendum: After doing a lot of reading in blackpowder forums (as mentioned earlier BP and the pyrodex substitute leave much the same corrosive salts as corrosive primers) it appears the old timers even to this day use hot soapy water to clean their guns, then oil after. It seems counter intuitive to me, but when everyone does it, there must be some validity to it.
Hot soapy water for Blackpowder rifles indeed is what I've heard consistently. As far as Windex + Boiling water, it has worked for both my brothers SKS and my Mosin. Windex after firing, then disassembly and boiling water when we're home and normal gun treatment regime after that. We haven't had rust issues yet so *shrugs* something is working.