Did they test 100,000 guns? From what I’ve read here it’s all been “trust us bro”.
Where is the real data?
I’d love to see the numbers. I’m open to going back to cleaning every few hundred rounds like I used to, but so far in what I’ve seen, there is no benefit to shoving shit down my barrels.
Clean the action, bolt, throat, firing group with brake clean with barrel facing up, re-oil bolt and keep on rolling.
You are confounding. I'm doubtful cleaning prolongs barrel life are improves accuracy. They don't provide any good data on that, though they imply it does.
However, it only takes a few case reports with good methodology investigating the issue to prove issues can be created. They talk about this more in podcast 1 or 2, I've recounting an example twice alread, so it is pointless to do so again. I don't remember which podcast exactly as I listened to all three in one day.
Would you be able to share this here?
I'm not sure they give what you expect, but seriously, take the time to watch the podcast. Or don't, but just remember your choice the next time you are tempted to tell someone to read the 223 thread.
Would someone be able to summarize their findings please?
Which rifles had issues when “not cleaned”?
What barrel length and twist rate?
What chambering?
What were the symptoms of the “issues”?
Did the same “issues” not present themselves on an identical rifle that was regularly cleaned?
If so, what was the cleaning interval?
If the only “issue” was “accuracy degradation” at what round count was this observed when not cleaned?
Appreciate not having to listen if possible if someone can summarize.
Way to simple a construction of the issue. Cut vs button pulled, stainless vs CroMoly, chrome/nitride vs bare steel, powder used, bullet used, pressure loaded to would all influence this. Somebody would need a lot of time and money to trash enough barrels in even one cartridge to get good numbers.
They specify that their experience is based on cut rifled stainless steel test barrels. They have the advantage of actually measuring pressure with every shot and using reference ammunition.
They specify comment that velocity goes up with pressure, until velocity plateaus and pressure keeps going up.
What's the downside of cleaning? Waste of 10 minutes and a few fouling rounds?
I don't clean often anymore, but a good scrubbing once every few hundred rounds helps me sleep better
And they are not even advocating a good scrubbing.
Literally:
1. Run a patch soaked in something like Boretech Eliminator down the barrel.
2. A few strokes with a nylon brush.
3. Let it sit for 20 minutes or so and go do something else.
4. Run a patch or two down the bore to wipe it out.
5. Run a patch soaked in 99% alcohol down the bore to clean out the solvent.
I'm lazy, if you said I had to scrub for 45 minutes every 500 rounds I would take my chances. The risk is low. But I can do the above pretty easily.
They also talk about how aggressive cleaning destroys barrels and run a rod down it as little as possible.