Demoz Articles
BookMark this Page    Tell Your Friend    Contact Us
Categories
 Arts & Entertainment

 Business

 Communications

 Computers

 Disease & Illness

 Fashion

 Finance

 Food & Beverage

 Health & Fitness

 Home & Family

 Internet Business

 Politics

 Product Reviews

 Recreation & Sports

 Reference & Education

 Self Improvement

 Society

 Travel & Leisure

 Vehicles

 Writing & Speaking

Useful Links
  Free Visa Guide

  Study Abroad

  UK Immigration

  Canada Immigration

  Australia Immigration

  Work Permits

  Arabic Girls

  Night Life of Dubai

  Jobs in Dubai

  Jobs in UK

  Search Universities

  Girls Fashion

  Bollywood Models

  UK Poetry and Jokes

  UK Hot Girls

Home / Recreation And Sports / Hunting / Gun Cleaning

Gun Cleaning 101

Resource for the latest of Gun Cleaning 101. It contains latest useful information of Gun Cleaning 101 along with detail of Gun Cleaning 101, also get the latest articles of Gun Cleaning 101

Gun Cleaning 101

  Viewed : 82Mail to a FriendRating :    Rate it

If the gun fails to fire in that situation, you probably won't live to regret it anyway. Neither will your family. (Of course, you can hide in your room and wait for your local overworked and understaffed police force to come to your rescue. But that's another subject.) Clean Your Gun!

Cleaning Tips

Use a bronze wire brush for normal bore cleaning. When removing copper, heavy lead fouling, or plastic shotgun wad fouling use a nylon brush with Shooters Choice or similar bore cleaner. (Shooters Choice is a powerful bore cleaner, will eat bronze brushes.)
Run the bronze brush through the bore once for every round fired. (I prefer Hoppes #9 solvent for light cleaning.)
If you are serious about the care of your gun invest in a coated steel or brass cleaning rod. Aluminum rods are soft. They collect grit and particles that can scratch the bore.
Wipe the rod off after every pass through the bore.
Use a brass jag to push patches through the bore. Dragging a dirty patch in a slotted tip back through the bore is not what I call cleaning.
Use a bore guide or brass "bumper" to protect the chamber or muzzle crown from damage.
Clean the action with a blast of pressurized solvent such as Gun Scrubber by Birchwood Casey. It cleans without leaving a residue.
Oil Lightly! Oil attracts dirt! If you can see oil, you probably oiled too much!

If you're concerned that you've oiled too much, try storing your gun with the barrel down. This will prevent oil or solvent from seeping into the wooden stock.
Strip clean about every 800 rounds or so. If you don't know how and don't have an owners manual, take the gun to a Gunsmith. It doesn't cost that much. (It's cheaper than having him replace that spring that went flying into the recesses of your oh so clean garage or basement work room.)

There's much more to gun care, but this info should put you ahead of the game. If you want to learn more, check out a hobby gunsmith course such as one offered here at The Fish Creek House and Gun Club in Southwest Montana We offer Firearms training repair, rebluing, nickel, chrome plating, teflon, custom work from recoil pad installation to complete custom rifles and handguns built to your specs.

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

FCV specializes in providing tactical, defensive, and competition firearms training to civilians, law enforcement officials Gun handling, marksmanship, and tactical training courses taught by NRA ceritifed instructor , Gunsmithing services available . Offers metal reaction and paper targets for handgun and rifle shooting. Training available. Join us on at our newly built shooting range in SW Montana. You can hunt us down at Fish Creek Ventures in Southwest Montana

Tell Your Friend :


  Resource for Gun Cleaning 101
© 2006-2008 DmozArticles : Latest collection of articles of all categories. All material on this site is copyrighted by its respective owner. If you see your copyright violated here, please Contact us Free Articles