You need a simple electric bore cleaner. it's just a steel rod with spacers made of electric tape to keep it in the middle of the bore, two wires, and a 9v battery. Fill the bore with ammonia, (plug muzzle), insert rod, but make sure that it is not in contact with rifle, hook one terminal to rod and the other to the rifle. In 10-20 minutes you have a clean bore. Really clean, without damage from too much brishing, etc. Search google for drawing.
Yup. I even used a variation of it on a 40mm cannon barrel section (note that the OP has already tried his "Foul Out" system though
)...
There are as many barrel cleaning methods as there are shooters it seems; I'm sure many of them work just fine.
On a few pitted barrels, one method I've used somewhat successfully was to clean the barrel thoroughly, then run a bronze brush wrapped with a patch using JB "Bore Bright" down the bore several times. This stuff is different from JB bore cleaning paste and has a slightly more aggressive polish in it. Leave a
little of the Bore Bright in the bore (don't use solvent to clean it out) then go shoot the rifle and clean the bore again. Kinda similar to "fire lapping."
I've found that after a few cycles of the above, the bore looks better and is easier to clean. However, accuracy did not improve in all of the rifles I've tried this on; some do, some don't. I've only tried it on poorly shooting pitted barrels, and none ever got any
worse accuracy than before polishing.