Hi Guys,
I just wanted to say thanks to all of you that helped steer Pete in our direction, and Virg, thank you for the kind words about our products. Oh, and Vern, if you should decide to give our products a try I'm quite sure you'll be more than happy with the quality of the threads along with their longevity.
Good Shooting!
Don ...BRBCP ...
FB, if you are happy with your system then don't sweat it. I personally have been using nylon jags for my 30BR that are left over from ancient cleaning kits. For my rimfire I have shortened one of the Dewey brass jags. Most brass jags are far too long imo.
I also believe in Dewey coated rods. Everybody has to satisfy their own ideas they have developed through prior experience. These ideas will rarely be universally accepted.
I didn't notice any .22 jags on your site. Do you make them?
Thanks,
Pete
I'm with you 100%. One of the Gunsmiths I use sez he loves guys who use SS rods. Give him lots of work. He recommends coated rods. I also noticed the other Gunsmith I use uses Coated Rods also.
I use to use Eliminator as a final cleaning for my barrels. I used a SS rod and a Nylon Jag for it so that there was no brass to cause any fales color. At the time I only had a .22 SS rod so I used a 6MM rod guide I have. That worked pretty well in terms of keeping the rod off the barrel and from sagging.
The problem with our system is nearly all cleaning Guide Inserts are too generous in rod clearance. Why is there any need to have more then.002' or .003" in a rod insert? Much more than that and a 44" rod will sag at the crown, which leads to damage over a period of time. It isn't so much the rod sagging it is the angle of droop caused by the insert having too much clearance.
Another issue is the length of the rod inserts. Only a few have inserts long enough to support rods properly, from those I have seen. I have never undrstood why folks were satisfied with that??? If I see these, what I consider faults, certainly others see them as well. Lets discuss it if so and perhaps some attention will be directed toward a solution. Those who make rod guides surely can bore and/or ream smaller holes, one would thing, No?
Hi again Pete,
I have made a number of rod guides or chamber guides as I call them for single shot falling block type actions. I'm also in the process of designing and making a two piece rod guide for Anschutz model 54 single shot rim fire actions in 22 caliber. The problem with making a two piece rod guide for a plastic coated Dewey rod, that would fit the rod the way you are talking about, is in the inconsistencies of the thickness of the plastic coating on the rod itself over it's length.
I'm not saying that Dewey rods are bad rods, but just give this a try. Take your best Dewey rod or borrow a new one, take a good mike and start measuring about every 4" over it's length. You are probably going to find variations of .002" to .003" in diameter in numerous spots over the length of the rod. You can not make a two piece rod guide with a usable length that will support that rod the way you would like it to and still allow the rod to pass through it.
If you truly sit down and do the math, depending on the relationship of the rod diameter to the diameter of the bore you are passing it down, you will find a .001" fit between a 4" long supporting tube on your rod guide and the best made stainless steel rod will still not support that rod at the end of the barrel, depending on the length of the barrel naturally. The only way to truly support the rod from one end to the other is with a good rod guide and the jags that I make. By using those two items what the rod is made out of becomes irrelevant along as it is straight, stiff enough, and of a small enough diameter to allow the bore guide and my bore riding jags to keep it from ever touching the bore. Example: .185" diameter rods used in .224 bores
For those of you that may not know about my jags yet please find the "Best Bore Guide" thread on this "Centerfire Benchrest" forum to read more if you are interested.
In my humble opinion,
Don ... BRBCP ...