If you felt inclined, is it okay to put the barrel/action in the oven on an angle and have the cosmo drip out into a tray? Could this damage it if done on low heat?
Cosmoline is pretty stinky stuff, if you have an understanding wife you might get away with it but the boiling water method works so good, it takes everything off, you then finish with brake cleaner, get the dried bits off, rub down with a little gun conditioner and mine both turned out like new. I poured boiling water down the barrel too and just swabbed out with bore cleaner after, it looks great. /i guess each method has its plusswes and minuses, I will use boiling water every time.
Here's the nice thing about boiling water. Use lots of it. Don't be shy. Get the barrel so hot you can't touch it, or any metal part like the bolt, for that matter.
Metal does a great job at retaining heat. After letting all the bits sit for half an hour, I found that pretty much everything was bone dry from the retained heat making all the moisture evaporate. Mind you, relative humidity in my house in the winter months is about 40%. Live in a tropical climate and you may not have the same success.
I am about to embark on this rite of passage with the SKS I received yesterday. Boiling water seems like the most newb friendly approach. Wish me luck...
It doesn't say it on their website but can anyone tell me if the Chinese SKS they are selling come with the cleaning kit in the stock and a sling? Do I use regular gun cleaning solvents to clean the SKS after shooting the corrosive ammo?
good luck, tell us how you made out.
Lei è un mangiatore di torta grande no?Amico mio, Siciliano, if you'd soaked the parts in Varsol first you would've saved yourself a lot of work and boiling acqua, sono sicuro!![]()
simple grenn from canadien tire and a paint brush



























