Bronze Brushes
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Bronze Brushes
Hi,
Can anyone please tell me if cleaning the barrel with a bronze brush does any damage. I have a new barrel fitted on my rifle so I do not want to ruin it. I was told once that using a bronze brush will remove any glazing that forms in it. I wonder if using a nylon brush is better or maybe a combination of the two.
BC
Can anyone please tell me if cleaning the barrel with a bronze brush does any damage. I have a new barrel fitted on my rifle so I do not want to ruin it. I was told once that using a bronze brush will remove any glazing that forms in it. I wonder if using a nylon brush is better or maybe a combination of the two.
BC
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Bronze Brushes
BC wrote:Hi, Can anyone please tell me if cleaning the barrel with a bronze brush does any damage. BC
Lengthwise no, radially maybe. Take an offcut of barrel, twirl a copper brush around radially and look with a borescope.
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James, your posts always seem to be very brief, I know you are very knowledgeable, but at times, your responses dont seem to get your message across.
So, are you saying using a bronze brush, damages the rifling? Who, would rotate a brush radially without moving through the bore. Yes, most would understand, spinning a brush, in one spot could cause damage, but does following the rifling, also cause damage?
Your valuable expertise, in this area would be appreciated.
Cheers
Danny S
So, are you saying using a bronze brush, damages the rifling? Who, would rotate a brush radially without moving through the bore. Yes, most would understand, spinning a brush, in one spot could cause damage, but does following the rifling, also cause damage?
Your valuable expertise, in this area would be appreciated.
Cheers
Danny S
DannyS wrote:James, your posts always seem to be very brief,
So, are you saying using a bronze brush, damages the rifling? Who, would rotate a brush radially without moving through the bore.
Apologies for being brief, result of being beaten up on forums years ago,,,
Bronze brush doesn't damage the rifling per se but it can scratch it.
This is hard to see because the rifling and scratches are both longitudinal.
Best test is a piece of cutoff barrel one inch long, start by scrubbing with the lands,
borescope with good external light source should pickup the marks if the brush is new.
Otherwise, twirl the brush radially and you will definitely see the marks.
My final experiment was to run-in two new barrels, one with copper brush, one with nylon.
Both barrels were good but I found the latter barrel cleaned easier and I seemed to shoot better with it.
My conclusion was I didn't need the copper brush to keep the barrel clean.
Regarding glazing of the barrel in the leade, I've found cleaning the barrel at the end of each days shooting assists in not letting the glaze build up
and an application of Iosso bore cleaner every 150+ rounds removes the carbon far easier than a copper brush.
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James,
Thanks for that info. I for one wont beat you up on a forum for your opinion. I used to think that the bronze brushes would harm my bore, and ive started using them and havent seen any issues so far. My barrel has gotten easier to clean since I started using Bronze brushes.
Thanks for that info. I for one wont beat you up on a forum for your opinion. I used to think that the bronze brushes would harm my bore, and ive started using them and havent seen any issues so far. My barrel has gotten easier to clean since I started using Bronze brushes.
Shaun aka 'Quick'
Yanchep, Western Australia
308 Win F/TR & F-S
7mm F-Open Shooter.
Yanchep, Western Australia
308 Win F/TR & F-S
7mm F-Open Shooter.