[quoteI've allways been told to stay away from any oild that contain petroleum products, but not allways doing as I've been told I've tried some and paid the consequences. One heck of a cleaning mess after only a few shots.
Granted I live here in the S/S desert, but right on the Colorado river so rust can be a factor. I also do most of my hunting in UP Michigan which seems to know I'm coming and greets me with rain or snow and all kinds of nasty stuff. So far I haven't had a problem using Bore Butter as a lubricant and rust preventative. I use the old clean-up recipe I call "mule snot" of Murphy's Soap Oil, Hydrogen Peroxide, and Alcohol equal parts, and then oil er down with Bore Butter. Haven't had any problems with this solution, and I probably get to shoot more BP than most as I have my own range per se. I don't use the substitute BP, and lately have been using Dragon 3F which I'm finally exhausting, and will probably buy some more when that's gone. Seems cleaner than Goex, and very consistant. The only thing I don't like to have to do is use a brake cleaner on any of my guns to remove the oil that I don't think should have been there in the first place. All I do is run a clean patch down the bore, before loading up and go about my business. Especially with the Kentucky style rifles that you can't remove the barrels without a laborious effort, that brake cleaner I would think would remove more than just the oil.
Now I'm not a chemist, but so far it's worked for me, and the Bore Butter seems to do what I want it too, and my guns are rust free and shooter better every time I take 'em out. JMHO don't claim to be no expert. Oh by the way lately I've been uing a BP lube called Thompson's Bullet Lube Co. out of Garland Tx. smells pretty good and seems to work very well. It says it's a patch lube. I got it for free at a CAS shoot, comes in a whote jar. RR[/quote
River runner- Firt of all the brake cleaner doesn't require removing the barrel, you're just spraying some on a patch and running it down bore
on your jag to remove any oil. Contrary to popular opinion a number of vegetable based oils will also create tar fouling. I'm a firm believer in
a clean bore as I believe if any of the nasties (fouling salts) are in the steels pores they can do thier dirty work, and the never putting any oil in your bore is based on not removing it before you load and shoot, but it's undeniable that nothing protects steel barrel alloys better than petroleum based oils, particularly when you're talking longer term storage.
I'm glad you shoot the real stuff but I don't believe your going to be able to get any more of the Chinese BP, if you can it won't be for long as it's further importation was expressly forbidden by comrade Clinton.
You might want to try the new version of WANO called Schuetzen avail' from Elephant distributors it's Alder based rifle grade and is reputed to be very clean burning, consistent from lot to lot (they are a huge European BP producer(German) ) and extremely interested in getting market share in the US. For the really hot stuff ever try the Swiss ? It's amazing in revolvers, cartridge applications, small bore ML's and flinters in general
and when you use it right it's incredibly clean and fast, you can get a mixed case and try some if you're ordering Schuetzen or Elephant, I've been using the Swiss for a couple of years and it's excellent the equivalent of the legendary Curtis & Harvey Black diamond from the days of yore, and I'm told the Schuetzen is nearly as good but a slower burn
(rifle grade) unlike the Swiss which is a true Sporting grade.
I'll try the Thompsons I've heard good things about it and SPG does seem rather expensive. is Thompsons more reasonable ?
As far as the Mule Snot (Friendship Speed Juice) I strongly suggest you de-breech your rifles and if the rust hasn't done too much damage clean up the threads with a wire wheel, and coat the threads with a good quality
rust inhibitor then a generous quantity of anti seize compound and if you continue to use the mule snot I'd de-breech at least annually to check things out just to be on the safe side, that Hyd. Peroxide will absolutely wreak havock on unprotected steel, which is why it suddenly dissappeared from many a loading bench at shoots a few years back
I still have some and use it on occaison on my BPC rifles and it does kick butt.
Have you ever tried Emmerts Lube ? It's variations include crisco, bees wax, neetsfoot oil jojoba oil etc, etc, etc, and if you dig around in the archives here or on shooters.com and elsewhere you'll find a profusion of different recipies I believe for your CAS revolver shooting it would be superior to and dramatically less expensive than Bore Butter, and you can alter it for the season, reletive humidity etc.
Regards fredj