After the range trip where I shot off another 200 rounds in my PC9, I figured it's probably time I cleaned it since I haven't since I got it a few months ago, and I've put about 900 rounds through it, including a couple of boxes of old Winchester white box (looking at the brass which looked charred, I knew the inside of the gun was probably fouled up).
So I have been watching some YouTube vides and all of them seem to deal with how to clean the regular PC Carbine with the traditional stock and no aluminum handguard. Some info on those don't apply to the one I have that has the aluminum handguard and the 6-position extended stock.
The key difference, really, in the initial takedown, is separating the upper and lower receiver. In the videos it shows two gold screws on the underside of the receiver. However in the PC 9, there is only one gold screw on the underside of the receiver. That one loosens but does not come out. The second screw that needs to be removed is on the top back of the gun, directly above the pistol grip. That screw is completely removed and that allows the pistol grip to be removed, thereby allow you to separate the upper and lower. I would imagine most people who opted to change to the Glock magwell would know this already anyways....but it's not quite the same as the videos online.
Cleaning it was pretty easy with my CLP, patches, the bore snake thing, and the tipton picks (they look like dental tartar removal picks).
The only thing I was careful about and I did not manipulate it in any way was the trigger pack. I just applied some CLP and toothbrushed the surface of the internals - what I could see and reach. Reason why I didn't go further I (aside from no experience) is some of the comments I read online with some people who started to move parts around, they then had springs and such pop out of the trigger pack and then they were screwed. I am not sure how critical it is to do a thorough cleaning on it. For fear of screwing something up, I pretty much cleaned it with a patch and tipton pick but didn't move the hammer or anything or manipulate the safety.
The gun was FILTHY dirty - several initial patches were completely black.
Got it cleaned up and even with my low technical skill, I managed to put it back together and did a function check on the bolt, bolt catch, safety, and did a dry fire and everything seemed to be normal. Overall, fairly easy to clean but I do have a question about that trigger pack...
Appreciate your thoughts, insights and experience with this and any further suggestions and advice. Thanks!
So I have been watching some YouTube vides and all of them seem to deal with how to clean the regular PC Carbine with the traditional stock and no aluminum handguard. Some info on those don't apply to the one I have that has the aluminum handguard and the 6-position extended stock.
The key difference, really, in the initial takedown, is separating the upper and lower receiver. In the videos it shows two gold screws on the underside of the receiver. However in the PC 9, there is only one gold screw on the underside of the receiver. That one loosens but does not come out. The second screw that needs to be removed is on the top back of the gun, directly above the pistol grip. That screw is completely removed and that allows the pistol grip to be removed, thereby allow you to separate the upper and lower. I would imagine most people who opted to change to the Glock magwell would know this already anyways....but it's not quite the same as the videos online.
Cleaning it was pretty easy with my CLP, patches, the bore snake thing, and the tipton picks (they look like dental tartar removal picks).
The only thing I was careful about and I did not manipulate it in any way was the trigger pack. I just applied some CLP and toothbrushed the surface of the internals - what I could see and reach. Reason why I didn't go further I (aside from no experience) is some of the comments I read online with some people who started to move parts around, they then had springs and such pop out of the trigger pack and then they were screwed. I am not sure how critical it is to do a thorough cleaning on it. For fear of screwing something up, I pretty much cleaned it with a patch and tipton pick but didn't move the hammer or anything or manipulate the safety.
The gun was FILTHY dirty - several initial patches were completely black.
Got it cleaned up and even with my low technical skill, I managed to put it back together and did a function check on the bolt, bolt catch, safety, and did a dry fire and everything seemed to be normal. Overall, fairly easy to clean but I do have a question about that trigger pack...
Appreciate your thoughts, insights and experience with this and any further suggestions and advice. Thanks!