Typically,
1.A field strip, clean and lube every 3 months or 500 rounds - whichever comes first. Spend 5-10 mins tops per firearm. Inspect springs and wear components for excessive wear.
2. Detail strip, clean and lube once every year or 2500 rounds - whichever comes first. Approx 45 mins to an hour per firearm. Also the time I inspect each component thoroughly, and replace as necessary.
3. For firearms shooting corrosive ammo I clean thoroughly after each range trip.
4. Most firearm contact surfaces get a drop of lube/grease (as necessary) and a a quick function check at the range prior to loading ammo. 30 seconds to a minute/ firearm.
None of my firearms spend extended time in the safe so this cleaning schdule works for me. I've actually made a Level 4 P3 schedule for my cleanings and replacement intervals![]()

(1). Don't be a doubter - CLP is NOT the best lubricant, there are many lubes that are better (TW25B, Slip2000 EWL, MotoMaster wheel bearing grease, etc). And the Army doesn't always use what's best, cost, availability and "Made in Canada" also come into the equation;
(2). Talk to guys who use the Bushmaster 25mm - pretty sure that CLP is a last resort. I've seen them GREASE the GAU-8 and the Vulcan, never seen anyone use CLP;
(3). Grease does it better. If you're not in the green machine and can choose the best CLEANER and the best LUBRICANT, I doubt you'll be picking CLP.
Good for a bunch of stuff seldom means great at any one thing, and the discussion is about lube specifically...
blake
This is very true the military doesn't always use the priciest stuff, however, they are huge into preventive maintenance. IF CLP allowed weapons to wear significantly I can assure you it would not be used. I have personally cleaned the 25mm Bushmaster and we use CLP. It is also used on 105mm on Tanks for that matter. To address your last point specifically "Good for a bunch of stuff seldom means great at any one thing, and the discussion is about lube specifically..." a lot of what is advertised is something that the oil does anyway. Motor oil has detergent in it and we all use it in our vehicles, it also lubricates an protects from rusting, but that is what oil does. Everyone has seen a Palmolive comercial where they put a drop of soap in greasy water and it sends it running to the sides, That is what soap does, ANY Soap. Palmolive was just smart enough to put it on TV first. SO CLP the bunch of stuff that it does is a property of the OIL itself and witty marketing it is not made as a do all it just does it because that is what oil does. That being said I am sure it has extra additives for heat and to keep carbon captured. Other then that it is doing what it does so why do you need 5 different things to clean your rifle when 1 works and works well? You do know the trick of successful business is to keep your customer buying. If you can convince them to buy more for no real reason then that increases the bottom line but doesn't make it nessesarily great for the customer. Personally if my rifle is carboned up I use Brake Cleaner Works AWESOME for removing Carbon just make sure you relube because it takes all that out too...
I couldnt find ANYTHING that argued it was.
That'd be you, I suppose.CLP a very poor lubricant ?
Doubt it - its use by the military belies that assumption. The U.S. military extensively tested many types of goo - CLP came out on top.
I clean all of my guns after I go to the range...every one of them is spotless when it's stored in my safe
That'd be you, I suppose.

No argument in my posts - (if you read the entire post rather than a partial out of context phrase)
CLP is neither a poor lubricant nor the best lubricant -
But it does do the job, and does stuff other high lubricity lubes dont -
![]()
You're right, it dries out and burns out quickly.

Finally a man who respects his firearms for what they are. Precision instruments deserve special attention, and its always nice to ride her hard but put her back clean.

Not in our experience -
It is designed to dry, and impregnate the metal with the teflon like goop to increase lubricity in dry environments (without liquid to attract the talcum sand in our present combat environement) [read previous posts].
It doesn't burn out quickly - it stays and keeps things slick! -
It does however lose its ability to put crystalized carbon into suspension for blowing out the ejection port when it dries.
Thats why you reapply - lube and cleaning with one squirt !
Easy peasy ( all in the original U.S. army testing reports that led to adoption [not price] ) - (re read early previous posts if comprehension is still an issue) -
(CLP 101)![]()
I clean all of my guns after I go to the range...every one of them is spotless when it's stored in my safe
How often should/do you clean your AR after a day at the range? Every time, after a few times, etc? When I go, I usually only go through 40 to 100 rounds.
Thanks.
This right there is 100% bulls**t. The same bulls**t that results in malfunctions on the two way range and has already cost too many lives. Lube isn't a magical sand magnet like so many Einsteins teach soldiers in Afghanistan, sand gets in your weapon ANYWAY, and is the very reason you should put MORE lube than normal. No weapon should ever be dry in the sandbox, period.
And no, nobody has comprehension issues with your previous posts, we're not retarded.




























