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One of Us |
Picked up an old Marlin M94 in 25-20 and need to get the lead out. What do you have the best luck with? Thanks | ||
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one of us |
WipeOut left in overnight, it breaks down the alloys in lead making the remaining lead come out real easy with just a tight patch, no brushing necessary, works great. http://www.sharpshootr.com/wipeout.htm
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One of Us |
Thanks, I'll give it a try. | |||
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One of Us |
You might try M Pro-7, I've been very satisfied with how it works on lead fouling. | |||
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One of Us |
Soaking the barrel overnight in Kroil penetrant might help, then brush vigorously with a brass brush. I also recently heard that turpentine is a good lead remover. | |||
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One of Us |
Go fire a hand full of jacketed bullets right off the bat --this will dragg lots of lead from the bore then do your solvent brush routine if you are inclined to be lead free. I used to lose sleep about lead in my pistols and found (no antique steels here) a cylinder of jacketed bullets now and then keeps lead levals manageable. | |||
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One of Us |
I turned a 44 carbine muzzle into the banana peel look with that trick. There are no replacement barrels. I put a 444 Marlin barrel on it. I now have a micro groove 44 mag semi that is heavy. | |||
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One of Us |
Several companies make a product specfically for removing lead from barrels and cylinders. A common brand name is "Lead Away", but there are several other marketers of the same product under different names. Almost every real general gun shop carries at least one brand. It is a sheet of yellow cloth with some kind of chemical saturation. To use it, one cuts off a patch to fit whatever bore or chamber he wants to clean, puts the patch on a spear pointed jag, and pushes it through the bore or chamber. As the cloth is thicker than regular patch material, make sure to cut the lead removing patch smaller than you would regularly use in your bore. Examining the patch after just one pass through will show it to be covered with lead. It may take several passes to get all the lead out, and possibly several patches. For the last little bit of lead, one can scrub one of the yellow patches back and forth through the bore or cylinder. The cloth will leave a black residue on the area cleaned, but that is very quickly & easily removed with any gun bore solvent and regular cloth patches. I have used various of the brands out there...whichever one comes to hand will do very well. Over many years, it has never failed me and has been far easier (and cheaper) than, say, a Lewis Lead Remover (which uses a screen to abrade lead out of the bore or cylinder). My country gal's just a moonshiner's daughter, but I love her still. | |||
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one of us |
The great thing about the wipeout/patchout products is that you do not need to put any oil or conditioner down the barrel after you have cleaned it, it contains a rust preventative, so you shoot the barrel from clean no need for a fouling shot.. regards griff www.wipeout.org.uk | |||
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one of us |
http://www.boretech.com/products/eliminator.shtml This stuff is the absolute best bore solvent I have ever used. Once you try it you will give away all of your other lead and copper removing cleaners and solvents. Midway carries it. Try it and you won't be dissapointed. Bill T. | |||
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