I'll be darned...dyna bore coat

Four out of the five rifle that I treated shifted the POI during the burn-in portion of the program. I didn't bother moving it because I didn't know what was going to happen, but after the cleaning it stayed there. It doesn't make any difference, I took the 3 clicks and set the zero markers. The last one, now that I think about it got burnt in with 8 shells that were just some left-overs that I thought I'd burn up instead of dipping into the "good stuff". It was bang on, which doesn't prove anything since it wasn't even the ammo it was sighted in with. When I went back with it's own ammo it had made the 3 click shift. It doesn't matter, its just what I saw and I thought it was interesting.

Something I'm interested in trying is treating up some blackpowder guns, since those things are getting cleaned all the time. In the meantime my findings are just preliminary and I need more time and shooting to really draw any sweeping conclusions. I can say that was a godsend for that 7mm though, that's something that I don't need any more convincing about.
 
Was never good with peer pressure. I place my order yesterday. I'm curious to see if it will help with my .260 Rem which only calms down after about 10-12 shots after a clean barrel.
 
PM sent want to try it out on my Robinson Arms XCR-L barrels and my 6mm-284 I shoot a lot of Barnes bullets in these rifles = always fighting copper fouling.

CC
 
something interesting that I just discovered. I have a hoppes system that I just bought, and was using their patches in one of my .22lr's. The patch was coming out very clean off the jag, so I thought I was just about done. Also, I have an otis system. I thought that just for giggles, I'd run a tight patch down the bore and squeeze all the extra cleaner out. The tight patch probably required 75 pounds pull to run through. this was the patch that came out........


Untitled by wolverine00089, on Flickr

All the black stuff was shiny lead in real life. Not soot. I was amazed. So, I rane the one patch through 6 times and the lead stopped coming. Then I reapplied wipeout to the bore for further soaking. Keep you guys updated.
 
something interesting that I just discovered. I have a hoppes system that I just bought, and was using their patches in one of my .22lr's. The patch was coming out very clean off the jag, so I thought I was just about done. Also, I have an otis system. I thought that just for giggles, I'd run a tight patch down the bore and squeeze all the extra cleaner out. The tight patch probably required 75 pounds pull to run through. this was the patch that came out........

All the black stuff was shiny lead in real life. Not soot. I was amazed. So, I ran the one patch through 6 times and the lead stopped coming. Then I reapplied wipeout to the bore for further soaking. Keep you guys updated.

I found the exact same thing as you did on every rifle. Hoppes 9 sits on the shelf now. It cant touch what otis does. I was trying to remove copper form a rifle this winter and ayer 100 patches with hoppes it didnt make a dent. Tried Mpro7 and it didnt do jack either so I moved on to otis and it was like someone put a copper stripper in the barrel. Otis works really really well.

On another note does anyone know where to get some whipeout in Saskatoon or area??
 
Guys,

I have a pretty cool experience to report. I have a very close friend who had coated one of his rifle bores with DBC. He had a basement fire last summer that was so bad, the house was uninhabitable for several months while the authorities tested the structure for safety, and restored the house. The gun safe was in the basement. Because of all the heat, as well as the water that the fire department used, everything metal in the basement was rusted so bad that it looked like it had been sitting on the BC coast shoreline for 10 years. The bore of that particular rifle was no exception. I saw the rifle with my own eyes after the fire, and it was ugly. And I mean UGLY. I'm not sure what was in the bore, but the condensation, heat, and soot made for a nasty concoction. He just recently had a chance to get that rifle cleaned up. He had to work at most of the metal stuff he had in the basement to get the surface rust off, but when he went to clean up that rifle, he gave the bore two passes with a dry patch on a cleaning rod, and that was it. The bore was immediately restored to bright, shiny steel.

I thought that was pretty cool.

So while DBC cuts fouling down considerably and minimizes cleaning effort/time, it also serves as a darn good corrosion inhibitor.
 
Jordan,
That is cool. Shows one what a well made ceramic coating can do. We can thank the aerospace industry as well
as military & automotive concerns for driving the advances in chemicals & metalurgy.
The house fire aftermath is a good example of this.
:cheers:
 
I got a new cz 453 and did 3 passes cleaning it. Then I coated it. After that I shot 1000 rounds through it... Normally that amount of shooting will take 12-15 patches with my otis system at 6 passes per patch. Now after the bore coat, it takes 2 patches with 6 patches. That was the first cleaning since the coating... I've gotten a few unfired guns and have coated them thoroughly before shooting... also the 223 that had such copper fouling has made cleaning much easier... I don't know if the fouling is less yet...
 
I have been reading about dbc for a couple of years,great testimony to how well it works,going to have to get some now.It should work good in .22 lr damn dirty ammo.
 
Jordan Smith....HE'S A WITCH!!!!! Only explanation....

I ordered Some Dyna Bore coat half expecting it's snake oil...But I've wasted far more than $60 on other things so what the hay.
I have two rifles chambered in 8X63 Swede. One is a T/C Pro Hunter 28"SS fluted that started life as a 30/06. I sent the barrel to Ron Smith and he rebored it to 8mm and chambered it. It shoots very well but coppers up with only a few rounds. I use Sweet's 7.62 and the patches would come out blue as the never ending sky.
I cleaned and coated the barrel last night and took it out this morning, fired 8 shots. Brought it in and cleaned. First with a patch soaked in Hoppe's 9. Couple patches came out black with soot. Then I loaded a patch up with Sweet's 7.62, run it down the barrel and went back to my coffee to let it sit. First patch I pushed through....came out with some black....No blue....at ALL! I was sure something was wrong, so I sweet's up the barrel again....another coffee. Push another patch through....ZERO....No blue at all....So I've come to the conclusion that Jordan is in fact a witch and I'm now gathering fire wood.

Thanks Jordan! I'll recommend this product to anybody!

Russ...
 
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