Well, I emailed Dutch, and not only can he still see well enough to use his confuser, he can still write and make sense, too. What follows is my note to him and his response to me for the edification of all. Excuse any mis-spellings, typo's, etc. that might be in his; I did not feel that I had the right to correct them.
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Hi, Dutch...
Haven't been online for some time...some of the lads were just talking about how Hoppe's #9 Plus, or whatever it's called, seemed to be a water-soluble oil (in water, of course) and that reminded me of you and your recipe for pre-lubing patches. Are you still recommending that? I always liked the stuff, but was a little unwilling to depend on the cutting fluid to keep moisture off the steel, since it's water-soluble. So I'd use a bunch of WD-40 after that, or PB Blaster. I think these guys now that are all yelling "No petroleum products with BP fouling!" are nuts...the stuff MAY react badly with BP fouling, but you're supposed to take the fouling OUT, remember? THEN use the WD-40. A voice crying in the Wilderness. My wife says the Wilderness wouldn't have me, but that's another matter.
Pyrodex is weird...I can't really recommend it; if you haven't tried it, consider yourself lucky. It's extremely hard to get the fouling out if you've only fired one or two shots in cold weather, and it forms a protective layer over the rust. Ruined a barrel by not knowing that. Too bad, too...it was a pretty good barrel.
Clear Shot (by GOEX) is good for a revolver (Colts; Remingtons are so easy to disassemble that it doesn't pay to worry about it) because you don't have to worry about the fouling getting into the guts of your gun. Likewise Clean Shot, but if you're going to load cartridges don't use Clean Shot; it eats the brass.
Guess that's about it;
Charlie
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From :
Dutch Schoultz <dr5x@mindspring.com>
Subject :
Re: It's been a while...
Date :
Thu, 14 Aug 2003 10:29:09 -0500
Hi Charlie, it Has been a while.
Yes I'm still recommending the Dry Lube System, but there has been a
change in that the NAPA Auto Parts cutting oil formula has been changed
to some glycol-based product that just doesn't work well with the
System. The patches dry and will frequently catch fire AND don't help
your accuracy. Quite a few of my subscribers have been using Ballistol
instead of the NAPA product with considerable success. (See the MUST
READ letter on my web site.)
Ballistol was developed bt the Germans at the beginning of the 20th
century as a rifle cleaning product. The use of water soluble oil or
Ballistol was never intended to protect the steel of your barrel. It
was, if used as suggested, to provide a minimum of lubrication to the
cloth patch. My experiments over a 3 year period showed me that contrary
to popular wisdom, too slick was not good. The ball was long on its way
down range before the powder had done its thing. By limiting the
lubrication the powder can more fully produce its power before the ball
starts to move.
Ballistol is also water soluble and is recommended as an antiseptic and
a wonderful thing to put on bug bites as well.
I agree with you about the alleged nad effect of petroleum products.
What do these people use in their cars and trucks?
After a day shooting, I would use my Moose milk to clean the barrel til
I got clean patches out and then I would put two patches wet with WD-40
on the jag, run that up and down the barrel a few times till I was
certain all surfaces of the bore were coated and then would leave the
ram rod in the barrel with the bore protector sealing (somewhat) the
muzzle and would leave the barrel till next time at the range.
This is what I did the last day I was able to shoot. Took the rifles
home and leaned them against the wall. Five years later I decided to
have a look at the bores and found there was No black stuff, No rust.
This after five years in humid St. Louis.
One of the side effects of the WD-40 practice is that it gets into and
among the the molecules of the steel and in ffact "seasons" the rifle
barrel so the corrosive stuff can't get in there and show up a few days
later on patches as rust or whatever the "Black Stuff" iss.
See my 99.999999% Waterless Rifle Cleaning Methof in the tips section on
my web site.
Incidentally, my old web site froze up 14 months ago and has been
resurrected at:
http://home.mindspring.com/~dr5x/I have never used Pyrodex. I did see it once when trying to help a
Pyrodex user solve his misfire problems. I do know it is supposed to be
way more corrosive than Black Powder.
I have never used Clear Shot as that was developed after my failing
vision ended my shooting.
If Clean Shot eats brass I would be inclined to worry about it. I
understood the Clean Shot is no longer being made. Apparently its still
available.
The new to the US Swiss powder, alleged to be about 10 to 20% more
powerful, is reputed to be very clean with limited fouling. You still
have to clean but its not the mud bath some of the other powders
require.
Tell your Bride that the Wilderness is a wonderful place. Many
inventions are made there by rule breakers.
Vox Clamantis in Deserto, Is how you say "A Voice Crying in the
Wilderness" in latin. Somebody who agreed with my System felt I was
such a person and sent me the Latin saying.
Good talking to you.
Dutch Schoultz
For Tips and Infrequently Asked Questions
http://home.mindspring.com/~dr5x/A Vitalized Web Site for Easy Downloading
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BTW, Dutch's website is definitely worth a look; he's the guy that used to advertise in
Muzzle Blasts to sell his "method" of achieving BP accuracy. It works, too.
Charlie Detroit