How To Clean Your Rifle| Beginner Guide Oct 27,2022

You should always properly clean your firearm after a trip to the rifle range or your hunting grounds and wipe off the bolt and any outside metal parts with a lightly oiled rag. There are a variety of viewpoints on how frequently to clean the bore, or interior of the barrel, of your rifle.
 
The fundamental response, though, is that you should clean your gun before the bore becomes so dirty that it negatively impacts accuracy. The most common cause of rifles that were once good shooters going terrible is probably dirty barrels. That could occur every ten shots or every hundred shots, depending on your gun. Cleaning your rifle after each trip to the range, assuming that you shoot a few hundred rounds, is a good idea if you want to be on the safe side. A bullet traveling at close to 3,000 feet per second exerts more force on the barrel than any element of the cleaning process, despite some shooters' claims that excessive cleaning or brushing might damage a rifle's bore.
 
After hunting, cleaning your firearm is not necessary unless you shot a lot, or the barrel became clogged with sand or mud.
 
Items you need:
 
• A vise or gun cradle. You can work with two hands free and a stable work surface by clamping the gun in a vise or cradle. The majority of cradles also provide a handy spot to keep your cleaning supplies and tools.
Cleaning rod with coating. Cleaning rods with coatings have a protective surface that won't harm the rifle's bore. The finest cleaning rods also have freely rotating grips that enable the rod to rotate in tandem with the rifling of the barrel.
Brass brush or nylon brush for removing powder stains.
• A brass jag for guiding cleaning patches through the barrel while holding and using them. 
Cotton cleaning patches
• Bore guide. (It's necessary to keep the rod straight and stop cleaning solutions from flowing back into the action.)
• A powdery cleaner
• Solvent 
• gun oil
 
Procedure
1: Pass a few patches that have been soaked in solvent through the bore using a cleaning rod and jag. After that, apply a dry patch. Then, until the patches are coming out clean, switch between solvent-soaked patches and dry patches. On a truly unclean rifle, this can require twenty or more repetitions.
 
2. Use a copper solvent in conjunction with step one about every fifth cleaning. Use copper solvents strictly in line with the manufacturer's instructions.
3. Pass a patch through the barrel after lightly oiling it with Rem Oil. The barrel is now finished and ready for long-term storage. Run dry patch in the bore to drain any remaining oil before you're going to the range or going hunting.
4. After applying the powder solvent to the bolt, wipe it down with a cloth or paper towel. The best tool to remove any caked-on gunk is a toothbrush.

Our Top pick:BoreKare universal cleaning kit 


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