A little bird mentioned that he used Kroil as the first step in barrel prep.
Supposedly it separates loose metal from the barrel. So I gave it whirl today, and it worked great. I use a Dewey graphite rod, a brass jag, and tightly sized patches for each step.
1. Kroil soak inside of barrel
2. JB Bore Paste 200 strokes (new patch every 50 strokes)
3. Kroil clean (as many patches as needed to remove JB Bore paste)
4. JB Bore Bright 200 strokes (new patch every 50 strokes)
5. Kroil clean (as many patches as needed to remove JB Bore Bright)
6. A few dry patches to remove Kroil
7. A few wet patches of CLP, Gunzilla, or Balistol to lube & protect
8. 1 dry patch to finish
This is the method I'll use to prep brand new or "problematic" barrels moving forward. But for all subsequent cleanings I feel confident that the Patchworm bore cleaning kit will get the job done.
-Michael
Supposedly it separates loose metal from the barrel. So I gave it whirl today, and it worked great. I use a Dewey graphite rod, a brass jag, and tightly sized patches for each step.
1. Kroil soak inside of barrel
2. JB Bore Paste 200 strokes (new patch every 50 strokes)
3. Kroil clean (as many patches as needed to remove JB Bore paste)
4. JB Bore Bright 200 strokes (new patch every 50 strokes)
5. Kroil clean (as many patches as needed to remove JB Bore Bright)
6. A few dry patches to remove Kroil
7. A few wet patches of CLP, Gunzilla, or Balistol to lube & protect
8. 1 dry patch to finish
This is the method I'll use to prep brand new or "problematic" barrels moving forward. But for all subsequent cleanings I feel confident that the Patchworm bore cleaning kit will get the job done.
-Michael