Quote:
Originally Posted by Flewis
Can you give us instructions on what you did? Where did you get the compound? Did you just coat a patch and run it up/down the barrel?
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I had never done one myself until this one.....did a few google searches, found a couple different ways to do it, picked the way that suited what equipment I had...
- need a strong cleaning rod, I used a Tipton
- a .30cal bronze bore brush, one with a little use on it so it can be pulled or pushed the other direction without being removed from the bore.
- a pack of 3"x3" patches, I used Outers 42357
- 800 grit lapping compound, I got mine from Brownells
- bottle of Break Free CLP
fold a patch in half over the brush....saturate it with CLP....insert it from the receiver end to the beginning of the throat.....put a mark on the cleaning rod even with the end of the receiver, I used a paint pen.....push it through the bore until about half of the patch comes out the muzzle.....put another mark on the rod.....practice pulling and pushing the rod from mark to mark, the patch will take on a shape almost like a cylinder.....pull out and change the patch.....repeat with CLP only for 8 or 10 passes to shape the patch.....pull out and wipe a coating of lapping compound on the patch.....insert and lap from mark to mark, I changed the patch about every 25 passes....I did this for 300 passes.....then switched to pushing the lapping compound coated patches from chamber end to muzzle end.....the easiest way I found to do this was to thread the brush on the rod just a couple turns.....push the patch from chamber out the muzzle.....spin the brush a couple times, unthread it from the rod.....pull the rod out...thread the brush back on....push through to muzzle....repeat until done.....clean the hell out of everything when finished.....
fire lapped for 8 shots as previously described......
not saying it will work in every case but it worked in mine after finding out the bore was pretty tight...
shot over 200 round of various loads today....all groups were under 1.25"....much better than the 3" and 4" groups I was getting with the same loads.....
hope this helps...
kurtz