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Stainless cleaning brush


mickyh
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I've been looking all over for a stainless 12 bore brush but the only ones I can find are in the USA.

I'm having to wrap pan scrubber around a bronze brush to clean my odd shapped silver pigeon barrels.

Nothing else will get them clean.

The postage is ridiculous from America, twice the price of the article.

Would anyone know where I can source one in the UK ?

I'm not paying £20 for a wire brush.

Thanks Mick.

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I've been looking all over for a stainless 12 bore brush but the only ones I can find are in the USA.

I'm having to wrap pan scrubber around a bronze brush to clean my odd shapped silver pigeon barrels.

Nothing else will get them clean.

The postage is ridiculous from America, twice the price of the article.

Would anyone know where I can source one in the UK ?

I'm not paying £20 for a wire brush.

Thanks Mick.

i have the same problem with mine.

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I bet its plastic from the wads, try using acetone on a mop it should remove it, moisten the inside of the barrel around the area leave it for a while and then use your bronze brush. I certianly wouldnt use anything more than that, Beretta went to the trouble of Chroming there barrels then your doing your best to remove it, or at least damage it.

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I CANNOT BELIEVE ANYONE would use steel wool for cleaning a shotgun barrel, do i need to to explain why this is a bad idea or will i just be wasting my breath and sound very insulting.

 

Payne galway brush and better solvents should do the trick as has been said.

 

100% agree. Steel wool sheds lots of tiny bits that get everywhere, every one a start point for rust.

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Any form of polish is actually mild abrasion. If solvents wont work then fine wire wool has been used for many,many years. Personally unless you dealing with a very neglected gun I cant see the need for more than better solvents. A great way to remove plas wad is soak the bore in penetrating fluid. Stainless is too hard!

I credit someone with enough intellect to clean / flush out any residue of wool dust and removed crud they might produce from working parts, especially when the goal is to clean.

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try a 10g bronze brush in over bored barrels with a proper gun cleaner.

Thats a good idea.

I only use fibre cartridges so its not plastic.

I have, and use a Payne Galway brush but it wont touch the fouling.

I appreciate everyone and their dog has an opinion, but why would they make stainless brushes if they damaged the bore.

Stainless is only a kind of steel, I thought Chrome was harder than steel 850-100Hv (65-70Rc)?

Maybe I'm mistaken.

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I appreciate everyone and their dog has an opinion, but why would they make stainless brushes if they damaged the bore.

Stainless is only a kind of steel, I thought Chrome was harder than steel 850-100Hv (65-70Rc)?

Maybe I'm mistaken.

Chrome is harder than steel, and you won't wear out the chrome by a few uses of a steel brush, but the chrome layer is very thin - and though both hard and corrosion resistant, does need to be looked after.

 

Steel will not rapidly wear chrome, but it is a lot harder than brass - or phosphor bronze - and I suspect that prolonged regular use of steel may wear away at the chrome. Gunmakers usually recommend brass or phosphor bronze (and indeed that is what Beretta themselves supply with new guns).

Chrome is also resistant to corrosion, but once it starts it will get behind the chrome. Corrosion usually starts in small places where little specks of powder residue or tiny fragments of metal rest and damp is present - and once started - eats in and makes 'pits'. If a gun is mirror clean, it is much harder for corrosion to start. It can often start under fouling from lead or plastic where the burnt powder residue is trapped and tends to absorb water from the air - a bit like salt.

You are right to want the gun properly clean - and I think the plan of an oversize brass brush is a good one. Also use a solvent like Youngs 303 or equivalent. Get the fouling out, and when mirror clean, simply keep a little thin film of oil from a fire brush or wool mop, and the gun will remain free from any pitting indefinitely. Once really clean, its surprisingly easy to keep clean if done after each outing.

To most of us - our guns (whether £50 knockabout or Best Fine English) are an investment - if not to gain huge value, at least to use and enjoy and kept them in good condition they will last - in many case much longer than the original owner!

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You can lead a horse to water - as they say.

Good luck.

And the Horse has now had a good drink !

Shot 50 sporting this morning, used my new 10 bore brush and its worked a treat, clean barrels with no chance of damage or bits dropping off inside the gun.

10 bore brush went in surprisingly easily and was not tight.

Result !

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I have both a steel tornado brush and a regular stainless brush. Didn't find either of them to work that much better than a regular brush. Maybe my barrels are never that dirty! Just get a bronze brush and stick it in the electric drill with some good solvent

Edited by timmy1146
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