jeffpg
WKR
I dont clean it at all until the rifle tells me it needs it.
This is the only sensible thing to do, if you care at all about the accuracy of your rifle when you call on it.
I dont clean it at all until the rifle tells me it needs it.
Anyone have any thoughts/theories on this:
I got a new gun last weekend, and immediately took it to the range. Manual said for the 1st 10 shots, clean between each shot so I figured it probably wouldnt hurt anything..but I just ran 1 patch with solvent and 1 dry patch down between each shot. First shot was a flyer, next 3 were in a decent group so then I moved the scope to 0, next 6 shots were all within 1". Good enough.
Took it home and figured I'd give it a good cleaning to get all the factory gunk and whatnot out of the barrel. Did several rounds of wet patch, soak, dry patch. Took it to the range again yesterday and I'm still getting good groups, but everything is 1.5" higher. When the first few shots were high, I figured maybe it was just a clean barrel and they would settle back in, but after 20-25 rounds, they were all still right there at 1.5" high.
You shooting off a bipod vs bags the time before? You confident you had a good zero?
sometimes my technique changes just enough time to time that it could account for an inch or two.
Pay attention to things like free recoil, cheek pressure, head position, parallax etc...
In either case, cleaning the barrel will just make it last longer, just like any other mechanical device.
Form, Ryan
What’s your opinion on cleaning big over bore cartridges mainly carbon fouling and round count on them?
Fully agree with a Form and the others. More damage is done by cleaning and more so improper cleaning than rounds fired down the barrel. Especially when talking about a custom barreled rifle.
Form, Ryan
What’s your opinion on cleaning big over bore cartridges mainly carbon fouling and round count on them?