Wow. All the videos were right, you really have no idea what's going on in there until you stick a camera in. For a $60 borescope off Amazon, I'm extremely impressed. Android app is super simple, just download and plug it in.
Peeked into the bore of my slightly problematic 28 Nosler that has an estimated 200 rounds on it and gave me a little pressure spike at a low charge doing some load testing. At first it was hard to distinguish what I was actually looking at, initially it looked like some pretty nasty tooling marks in the neck area (turned out to be carbon), and it was hard to identify the end of the neck area and taper to freebore. So I chambered a case and got a better idea.
Still wasn't really sure what I was looking at, so I decided to start cleaning. I used boretech eliminator on a soaked patch wrapped around nylon brushes in 284 for the barrel, and a 30 cal brush on a short rod chucked up in a drill for the neck area. It started to show its ugly self..
More boretech, more scrub. Eventually I got about 95% of it busted out and could see what I was looking at. I'll have to stay on top of it.
Something I noticed, the boretech eliminator seemed to hammer the carbon, the barrel came clean after about 15-20 initial passes, but it didn't even touch the copper. I grabbed the Sweets and gave it another 20 strokes with a patch around a brush, and let it sit for a couple minutes before I dry patched it out and hit it with CLP to neutralize it, didn't seem to have any effect either.
Was doing all this outside and it started to rain, so I called it quits. That picture was probably a couple inches in from the muzzle end, the copper fouling was the worst in the first 1/3 of the barrel from the muzzle, and the middle to chamber area it was almost non existent.
So what are you guys doing to get the copper out? I thought Sweetser was super aggressive, or did I not use enough or wait long enough?
Peeked into the bore of my slightly problematic 28 Nosler that has an estimated 200 rounds on it and gave me a little pressure spike at a low charge doing some load testing. At first it was hard to distinguish what I was actually looking at, initially it looked like some pretty nasty tooling marks in the neck area (turned out to be carbon), and it was hard to identify the end of the neck area and taper to freebore. So I chambered a case and got a better idea.
Still wasn't really sure what I was looking at, so I decided to start cleaning. I used boretech eliminator on a soaked patch wrapped around nylon brushes in 284 for the barrel, and a 30 cal brush on a short rod chucked up in a drill for the neck area. It started to show its ugly self..
More boretech, more scrub. Eventually I got about 95% of it busted out and could see what I was looking at. I'll have to stay on top of it.
Something I noticed, the boretech eliminator seemed to hammer the carbon, the barrel came clean after about 15-20 initial passes, but it didn't even touch the copper. I grabbed the Sweets and gave it another 20 strokes with a patch around a brush, and let it sit for a couple minutes before I dry patched it out and hit it with CLP to neutralize it, didn't seem to have any effect either.
Was doing all this outside and it started to rain, so I called it quits. That picture was probably a couple inches in from the muzzle end, the copper fouling was the worst in the first 1/3 of the barrel from the muzzle, and the middle to chamber area it was almost non existent.
So what are you guys doing to get the copper out? I thought Sweetser was super aggressive, or did I not use enough or wait long enough?