I have the Birchwood Casey and a Foul/ Lead Out machine
Thanks Pete & Bill for the veteran advise. I'm sure there are several ways to get the lead out. The important thing is obviously not harming the bore.
Have either of you tried the Birchwood or Lead Out products? I never have so I don't know how abrasive they are. Its hard for me to believe that one could "scrub" the rifling away with either.
Kinda makes me want to pick both up to see how abrasive each are.
Keith
I don't like the Birchwood Casey because of the way the patches act. They are very tight going in but quickly loosen up. What I don't know is if the deal is a chemical reaction or the initial stroke mechanically taking the lead out but in my opinion, after one stroke there is not enough resistance to do any mechanical good. The last time I tried the Foul Out/ Lead Out it wouldn't work; electrical perhaps. It's an old one from the early 90's when I began this madness.
I had a long conversation with one of our top shooters yesterday. Cleaning came up. He has his own procedure and says most people have their own process. Some will only pull a brush through their bore and not many times and some use nothing but patches, some use nylon brushes; it's all over the ball park. I saw a quote one here once, some time ago by someone who was very well respected in this game. He said he could duplicate clean but if his barrel was dirty to any degree, he was never sure where he was at or when accuracy would fall off.
Take a used brush sometime and start sawing it on a piece of Stainless. See how long it takes you to wear a noticeable hole or groove. This will tell you how much you can use a bronze brush. Mebby the trick is to develop a baseline of fouling, if one can, and try to stick to it. The problem with getting "Real Clean" is directly related to the number of shots fired, from my experience. Once I think I have the throat clean, I leave a patch soaked with the Lead remover a few hours in the throat. If the patch has any gray on it, there is lead present. I have also found lead present in other areas in the barrel. Perhaps I should try to get my Lead Out machine working to see what it says. I know it works because I have seen lead on the rod more than once in the past. It's pretty easy to tell, with a clean patch, what the inside of the bore feels like. Any resistance is generally a sign of fouling and most often, from my experience, there will be radial black marks on the patch if fouling is present. I have seen though, resistance without any radial marks. Brush the barrel again and you often get a black or gray patch. I believe this to be a layer of carbon/lead covered with a baked on layer of wax. Perhaps someo f the barrels folks give up on or think they are shot out are, in reality simply fouled beyond their accuracy potential.
Interestingly enough to me is I have seen heavy lead deposits at the 5:00 position in the throats of my barrels, when they were newer. As the leade has been eroding, I have not seen it there in such copious quantities. Both my Rock Creek barrels shoot their best when they are very clean. We'll see what the Ratchet likes I guess.