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Thread: Cleaning a Ruger.

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  1. #1
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    Question Cleaning a Ruger.

    Just wondered how others clean their black powder guns. After removing wooden grips ect Iv always dunked them or flushed them with lots of very hot soapy water. Scrubbed em with a tooth brush and rodded the cylinders and bores out. Then dried them with an old hair drier and lubricated with grease on the bits i can get to or wd40 where i cant. Rodding the bore again to make sure its dry and coated with wd. Tim

  2. #2
    davederrick's Avatar
    davederrick is offline With our thoughts, we make the world
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    Sounds good. I usually put a little BP solvent down the bore, then do the soapy stuff much like you do.
    "I'm all in favour of keeping dangerous weapons out of the hands of fools. Lets start with typewriters." - Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959)

  3. #3
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    I've often thought that it would be nice if the time spent on cleaning could be less than the time spent on shooting....

  4. #4
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    Just pour boiling water over it straight from the kettle and scrub corners where dirt accumulate. The heat dries the gun quickly. Then lubricate thoroughly but not excessively.

    Also find that a dedicated gun lube such as Browning's work a lot better at preventing rust than WD40.

  5. #5
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    if you use triple 7 or pyrodex its much easier to clean. I find BP gets very sticky.

  6. #6
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    I have a Ruger Old Army in stainless. Each time I shoot it I take out the cylinder, remove the grips and pour 1.7 ltrs (a kettle full) down the barrel and the cylinder scrubbing vigoursly the attached nipples.
    Everyother time I shoot it (regardless of number of shots), I strip the gun to its components (including the nipples).
    This takes about an hour or so but after 12 years my pistol still looks like new and I've never renewed the nipples.

    Regards.
    Brian

    PS. I used Henry Kranks cheap sh*t (or anything else that was cheap!) for years but now use Swiss No. 1

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