The Down Range Forum
Member Section => Down Range Cafe => Topic started by: PegLeg45 on April 09, 2015, 12:33:21 PM
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I've used a few of these recipes for case cleaning, and a few look promising for gun cleaning, particularly the carbon cleaner...... perhaps in my ultrasonic cleaner.
I've used the LSD (Lemi Shine/Dawn) method to clean brass in my ultrasonic to great effect, but you can only do small quantities in the ultrasonic, so I'm in the process of designing and building a wet tumbling system to use the metal chips I posted about in the 'Reloading' board for bigger amounts.
Anyway, thought some of you might like the link to these recipes.
http://www.frfrogspad.com/homemade.htm
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I use a lube on my open gun reminds me of a recipe we used when I rebuilt automatic transmissions. This product is available in three different weights that you choose from based on the temperature you will be shooting in - The warmer the temps the thicker and stickier.
The lube we mixed up was ATF and Vasoline. We varied the amounts for different parts - Sealing rings, seals and O-Rings were coated with medium viscosity; Valves were straight ATF; Check balls were very little Vasoline; and springs and bushings were very high viscosity.
This lube was slipperier than snot on a door knob! If got it on a shaft or drum you were lowering into the case you could hardly hold it with your hands. I wonder how this would work on firearms in heavy use.
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I use a lube on my open gun reminds me of a recipe we used when I rebuilt automatic transmissions. This product is available in three different weights that you choose from based on the temperature you will be shooting in - The warmer the temps the thicker and stickier.
The lube we mixed up was ATF and Vasoline. We varied the amounts for different parts - Sealing rings, seals and O-Rings were coated with medium viscosity; Valves were straight ATF; Check balls were very little Vasoline; and springs and bushings were very high viscosity.
This lube was slipperier than snot on a door knob! If got it on a shaft or drum you were lowering into the case you could hardly hold it with your hands. I wonder how this would work on firearms in heavy use.
Might the difference is "drag" be great enough to effect the calibration/timing of recoil springs.
The mass of the slide would not change..but it would be moving faster?