Do you hunt clean or dirty?

Mikido

WKR
Joined
Dec 14, 2020
Messages
838
Rifle bore fully cleaned and oiled….cleaned/oiled then dry patch run through just before the hunt…..or shoot a few rounds at home at start of the season and ride dirty all the way through?

I used to over clean (I think), and now ride dirty all season.

Thoughts and experience with accuracy? Thanks
 

positivepete!

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Feb 16, 2018
Messages
290
Location
Northern Colorado
I clean my rifle after my season is over. I tinker with things all winter then in the spring and summer I shoot and tweak all the things I want until I am dialed in and happy with the way I am shooting. Then I dont mess with anything. So my vote goes for dirty.
 
Joined
Jan 10, 2022
Messages
42
Location
Appalachia
I keep the barrels clean between seasons and after range time. (Once residue is out, I run an oil patch followed by dry patch)

Only cleaning during season is the muzzleloader.
 

Dcrafton

WKR
Joined
Aug 10, 2016
Messages
620
Location
Morgan utah
I keep all my guns clean from dust, dirt and whatever.
I only clean the bore when the gun tells me so, or if I have been hunting in wet weather.
Even my competition rifles, I clean when they tell me to


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

Ucsdryder

WKR
Joined
Jan 24, 2015
Messages
6,691
Dirty, but learned a valuable lesson this year. Almost a costly one! Dirty suppressors can cause issues with carbon flakes in the chamber that can keep cartridges from loading! Going forward the plan will be to strip the barrel, chamber and suppressor to barrel metal and go out for one practice session, then hunt all season without cleaning.
 
Joined
Nov 16, 2017
Messages
8,759
Location
Central Oregon
After barrel break in I only clean when accuracy degrades, or it is fouled with dirt, water, etc.

Most rifles do not clean bore with the rest of the group.
 
Joined
May 3, 2020
Messages
542
I always clean after I shoot and since I sight in clean I figure things should stay the same as that. It might be better dirty but that’s just how I’ve always done it and it works for me so I just keep doing it that way. If I don’t shoot but conditions are particularly dusty or wet I’ll run a couple patches through it. I have read that some copper bullets tend to foul barrels faster due to the longer bearing surface of the typically longer bullet but haven’t looked too far into it. There’s probably not a wrong way as long as it works.
 
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