You have two good cleaners. Not the best, but good enough.
There are two kinds of barrel fouling - powder residue and jacket material. The Hoppes #9 will take out the powder residue. You have already done that.
In the future, when you come home from the range, use the brush and the Hoppes#9 to scrub the bore. Then run a wet patch through to take out the crud and anoint the bore. If you think the barrel is badly fouled, leave the gun overnight, muzzle down, so the crap does not drain into the action, bedding and trigger. then wipe clean.
The next step is the metal fouling. Copper solvents do that job. Some are faster than others. Wet the bore and then leave the gun overnight, muzzle down on a pad of paper towel. the stain the next morning will tell you if the barrel is clean. A big blue stain means "not yet". Wipe the barrel again with a wet patch of copper solvent and leave it muzzle down again. When you stop getting the blue stain, it is clean.
Here is a paper towel example. You can see that one gun was clean after two sleep overs. the other took 4.
Being lazy, I like the overnight method. If you can find a can of Wipeout foam, a single overnight would do the trick with most guns.