I have always cleaned a barrel from breech to muzzle for no other reason than that's the way the pellet travels,
After reading this thread it would make sense to pull the dirt away from the muzzle.
A very interesting thread. Thanks to all that contributed. Martin
That's a good point Zephyr, didn't think about that eitheratb Martin
Great thread Neil![]()
BSA SUPERSPORT .22
Ripley ar5s .177
SYWELL FT CLUB
Current airguns:- Steyr LG110: Steyr LP10: Air Arms HFT500: Weihrauch97 fully customised.
And I still 100% agree Neil !
With my very accurate competition TX back in the day, from a cleaned barrel it literally took about two dozen shots to restore full accuracy. This is a gun consistently capable of 1/4" groups at 30 yards. First five shot group on a clean barrel was often was 3/4", the second not much better, only really started looking promising from the 4th group.
Always looking for any cheap, interesting, knackered "project" guns. Thanks, JB.
If it takes 24 shots to condition a very finely finished Lothar Walther barrel, then perhaps it takes an order of magnitude more to condition a grittier one from a cheaper manufacturer? Or are the imperfections filled and the barrel conditioned in the same number of passes? Am I thinking of sandpaper?
I have a Milbro Diana .177 barrel soaking in oil at the moment, the rifling is actually hard to discern and the bore very 'matt'. Even once that is clean I imagine half a tin of pellets will need to be put through it before any firm conclusions about accuracy can be guessed at.