Cleaning & Kerosene???
Moderators: Bullseye, Moderators
Cleaning & Kerosene???
I was wondering if any of you fellows hang on to the old ways of doing things? When I was young we cleaned our guns with kerosene and used 3in1 oil them. I still field strip my guns and clean the powder and dirt off with kerosene, blow them dry with compressed air. I use other stuff for copper or lead removal. Mostly CLP and a little grease if needed and put them back together.
I have done it that way from the nothern woods of Indiana to the swamps of Florida, and never had a rust problem.
I have done it that way from the nothern woods of Indiana to the swamps of Florida, and never had a rust problem.
I still like the old way of using Hoppe's No.9 and Hoppe's gun oil. I still use rods and brushes, no bore snakes for me. I grease a few places with white lithium from the hardware store. All this worked good 30 years ago, so I guess it still works now. I'm grateful I can still buy the old stuff.
* 2 Ruger Bearcat stainless, w/ EWK ejector housings & Wolff springs
* Ruger SP-101 .22LR, w/ Wolff springs
* 2 NAA Guardian .32ACP
* 3 Zastava M70 .32ACP
* S&W 15-22 Sport (.22LR AR)
* 2 Ruger SR22 .22LR pistols
* Ruger SP-101 .22LR, w/ Wolff springs
* 2 NAA Guardian .32ACP
* 3 Zastava M70 .32ACP
* S&W 15-22 Sport (.22LR AR)
* 2 Ruger SR22 .22LR pistols
Here's the recipe for Ed's Red Bore Cleaner
1 part Dexron ATF, GM Spec. D-20265 or later.
1 part Kerosene - deodorized, K1
1 part Aliphatic Mineral Spirits
CAS #64741-49-9, or substitute "Stoddard Solvent", CAS #8052-41-3, or equivalent.
1 part Acetone, CAS #67-64-1.
(Optional 1 lb. of Lanolin, Anhydrous, USP per gallon, or OK to substitute Lanolin, Modified, Topical Lubricant, from the medication store).
The link is: http://home.comcast.net/~dsmjd/tux/dsmj ... ds_red.htm
I fellow named Grant Cunningham (a pistol-smith in Oregon-grantcunningham.com) also has done some research on gun lubricants and says Dexron ATF is very good, if you don't mind the smell. We sometimes forget that some of the "new and improved" is the same as the "old reliable" with a new package.
1 part Dexron ATF, GM Spec. D-20265 or later.
1 part Kerosene - deodorized, K1
1 part Aliphatic Mineral Spirits
CAS #64741-49-9, or substitute "Stoddard Solvent", CAS #8052-41-3, or equivalent.
1 part Acetone, CAS #67-64-1.
(Optional 1 lb. of Lanolin, Anhydrous, USP per gallon, or OK to substitute Lanolin, Modified, Topical Lubricant, from the medication store).
The link is: http://home.comcast.net/~dsmjd/tux/dsmj ... ds_red.htm
I fellow named Grant Cunningham (a pistol-smith in Oregon-grantcunningham.com) also has done some research on gun lubricants and says Dexron ATF is very good, if you don't mind the smell. We sometimes forget that some of the "new and improved" is the same as the "old reliable" with a new package.
- charlesb
- Master contributor
- Posts: 689
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2010 10:39 pm
- Location: Mountains of West Texas
I've used diesel fuel as an expedient, and was pleased with the results. This is another smelly solution.
The diesel fuel cleans up quickly, and leaves a thin, oily film behind that discourages rust.
I've used it on machinery for years, and recently tried it on a few firearms.
The ATF sounds interesting, but I don't want that red color getting on a stock.
Now I am curious as to whether diesel fuel would melt paraffin... It might be good for guns that are going into storage.
The diesel fuel cleans up quickly, and leaves a thin, oily film behind that discourages rust.
I've used it on machinery for years, and recently tried it on a few firearms.
The ATF sounds interesting, but I don't want that red color getting on a stock.
Now I am curious as to whether diesel fuel would melt paraffin... It might be good for guns that are going into storage.
Ed's Red with acetone sounds a little vicious. With all the polymer, plastic, components to today's guns I'd be very careful about some of the cleaners and lubes out there. Some of this stuff sounds like it could dissolve anything......
* 2 Ruger Bearcat stainless, w/ EWK ejector housings & Wolff springs
* Ruger SP-101 .22LR, w/ Wolff springs
* 2 NAA Guardian .32ACP
* 3 Zastava M70 .32ACP
* S&W 15-22 Sport (.22LR AR)
* 2 Ruger SR22 .22LR pistols
* Ruger SP-101 .22LR, w/ Wolff springs
* 2 NAA Guardian .32ACP
* 3 Zastava M70 .32ACP
* S&W 15-22 Sport (.22LR AR)
* 2 Ruger SR22 .22LR pistols
- blue68f100
- Master contributor
- Posts: 1997
- Joined: Mon May 25, 2009 10:31 pm
- Location: Piney Woods of East Texas
Most all gun Cleaning solvents have acetone or MEK or something similar to dissolve plastic's. But in low amounts. If your not dealing with shotgun ammo you can do with out the plastic solvent. Most all of the todays ATF is some form of syn lub, so it works very well as a lubricant. I've started using it for all rotating surfaces and bolt lube.
Diesel will dissolve Alsphalt's and/or tar. Great cleaner for the car to remove the tar spots. Not sure if it will do anything on paraffin.
Diesel will dissolve Alsphalt's and/or tar. Great cleaner for the car to remove the tar spots. Not sure if it will do anything on paraffin.
David
SS MKIII 6 7/8" Fluted Hunter. Mueller Quick Shot, Bushnell 2x Scope, Hogue Rubber Grips
Custom Built 1911
SS MKIII 6 7/8" Fluted Hunter. Mueller Quick Shot, Bushnell 2x Scope, Hogue Rubber Grips
Custom Built 1911
-
- Regular contributor
- Posts: 132
- Joined: Fri Dec 11, 2009 8:30 am
- Location: Brooklyn, NY and Pennsylvania
ED's
Ed's Red:
Four of those ingredients are solvents. How many are really needed? It would most probably work as well if it was just the tranny fluid and the kero - or the two separately.
Pete
Four of those ingredients are solvents. How many are really needed? It would most probably work as well if it was just the tranny fluid and the kero - or the two separately.
Pete
"Only hunting and mountain climbing are sports. The rest are just games." - R.Ruark