Just a thought...I would go to the range and see if it is shooting to your satisfaction before cleaning. If it is shooting well, skip the cleaning. If it is not shooting well, clean it up real good and see if your accuracy comes back. It will give you an idea of how often you need to clean it. If it is shooting well, and you do not clean it up, then when you decide it needs cleaned for what ever the reason, see if it changes any thing for you at the range. It will just give you an idea of how to often you need to clean it to maintain the accuracy you need. It will also build up your confidence in your shooting, knowing what it takes to maintain accuracy. When you miss, you will know it was you, or the wind/distance estimation and not because you cleaned too often or not often enough;D