I baby my SKS rifles. I figure if I treat a rifle made for illiterate conscripts extremely well, they'll treat me extremely well for as long as I live, and the owners after I die will have a rifle in very good condition.
-Boiling hot water down the chamber end (I have also used Windex, which does work but only because of the water in it, not the ammonia. I don't waste my money on it anymore)
-Give the bore a good scrub with a brush.
-Patches with Hoppes number 9 until they're white. This can often take up to 50 patches or more.
-One more pour through of boiling water, one more scrub with the brush.
-Patches with Hoppes until clean again.
-Boiling hot water down the gas tube to clean out all the corrosive crap that gets in there
-Stick small swabs of cotton with Hoppes on them down the gas tube until they come out reasonably clean. This takes a while but is worth it to me.
-CLP every other part except the gas parts, let them sit for a bit then wipe them off
-More CLP, re-assemble, let the rifle sit overnight, then wipe down again the next day/when I have the time
-Light coating of CLP on the working parts and store until ready to shoot again.
Overkill? Probably, but it's how I do it and plus, I like cleaning guns and I have more CLP than I know what to do with.
I am the first to admit, however, that if you do much less than this you will probably have no problems whatsoever. I'm just paranoid I suppose.
-Boiling hot water down the chamber end (I have also used Windex, which does work but only because of the water in it, not the ammonia. I don't waste my money on it anymore)
-Give the bore a good scrub with a brush.
-Patches with Hoppes number 9 until they're white. This can often take up to 50 patches or more.
-One more pour through of boiling water, one more scrub with the brush.
-Patches with Hoppes until clean again.
-Boiling hot water down the gas tube to clean out all the corrosive crap that gets in there
-Stick small swabs of cotton with Hoppes on them down the gas tube until they come out reasonably clean. This takes a while but is worth it to me.
-CLP every other part except the gas parts, let them sit for a bit then wipe them off
-More CLP, re-assemble, let the rifle sit overnight, then wipe down again the next day/when I have the time
-Light coating of CLP on the working parts and store until ready to shoot again.
Overkill? Probably, but it's how I do it and plus, I like cleaning guns and I have more CLP than I know what to do with.
I am the first to admit, however, that if you do much less than this you will probably have no problems whatsoever. I'm just paranoid I suppose.
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