Someone is going to have to explain this to me.
I shoot 500 rounds of cheap thunderbolts on on hot day. My 10/22 is now caked with powder and mild lead buildup. I give it a healthy spray of hoppe's elite or whatevers on hand and drag a bore snake through. The lead comes out in visible fragments, and a inspection of the bore shows there is no more lead. Caked on powder usually takes another pass or two. My boresnake is now pretty dirty.
Am I supposed to believe that if I drag the (now dirty) bore snake through the barrel once more that the carbon fouling is going to re-cake itself? Is the lead going to re-stick too? I'm sorry I just can't see how even the dirtiest boresnake is going to leave more than trace carbon which could be removed by an oiled patch. What's in your barrel is stuck on which is why we use a solvent, the bore snake is not going to re-stick it.
I shoot 500 rounds of cheap thunderbolts on on hot day. My 10/22 is now caked with powder and mild lead buildup. I give it a healthy spray of hoppe's elite or whatevers on hand and drag a bore snake through. The lead comes out in visible fragments, and a inspection of the bore shows there is no more lead. Caked on powder usually takes another pass or two. My boresnake is now pretty dirty.
Am I supposed to believe that if I drag the (now dirty) bore snake through the barrel once more that the carbon fouling is going to re-cake itself? Is the lead going to re-stick too? I'm sorry I just can't see how even the dirtiest boresnake is going to leave more than trace carbon which could be removed by an oiled patch. What's in your barrel is stuck on which is why we use a solvent, the bore snake is not going to re-stick it.




















































