Regular bore cleaning will keep your rifle shooting well. Hoppe’s

We may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs. Learn more ›

Some time ago, I was asked how to clean a rifle. There are as many different ways to do this as there are to summon Beelzebub, and there is no single “correct” method. Whatever works, works. Below, I’ve put step-by-step instructions on how I clean a rifle. First, here are some general tips.

How to Clean a Rifle: Summary

Think of cleaning as a two-stage process. First, you get out the powder fouling, then you get out the copper. For powder fouling, I use Shooters Choice solvent and phosphor-bronze brushes. When you’re finished with a brush, give it a toot from a can of Birchwood-Casey Gun Scrubber; this will get the dirt off the brush and will keep the Shooters Choice from eating the bronze bristles. For copper fouling, I use J-B Non Imbedding Bore Cleaner. Other copper-killers will not work on some barrels, or take forever, or will pit your bore if you leave them in too long. This stuff works fast, and will get all the copper out for sure. Keep your rods clean. That is why God invented paper towels. A dirty rod is an instrument of terrible destruction.

Do not use slot-type patch holders, You do not want to drag dirty patches back and forth through the bore. Each patch gets one trip only. When you think you’re done, leave the bore wet with Shooters Choice for a couple of hours and then run a dry patch through. If it comes out with no green on it, you’re done. Then run a Rem-Oil patch through the bore and a dry one after it. Clean the chamber with a dry patch. You don’t want anything at all left in there.

How to Clean a Rifle: Table of Contents

Rifle Cleaning Rules

Build a Home Gunsmithing Kit

What You Need to Clean a Rifle

How to Clean a Rifle Bore in 6 Steps

Rifle Cleaning Rules

Stop picking at yourself and pay attention to the following immutable truths about rifle maintenance:

If you don’t do it right, or don’t do it, eventually your rifle will fail to function, or start shooting groups the size of a garbage can lid, or both.

There is no single “correct” cleaning procedure. No two people do it exactly alike.

If you want to do the job right, get a borescope so you can look down the barrel and actually see what’s going on. Once upon a time, this involved spending considerable money. Now there are probably half a dozen out there that are eminently affordable. Without a borescope, you’re working blind.

Cleaning a bore is not one job. It is two separate jobs. First, you get to deal with powder fouling. Second, you have to remove copper fouling. Only then are you done.

Build a Home Gunsmithing Kit

What You Need to Clean a Rifle

There are all sorts of quality gun-cleaning products out there. Here is a list of what I use.

J Dewey nylon-coated cleaning rods. They come in .22 and .30. Set one up for patches and one for brushes. You’ll save a lot of time. I knew John Dewey. He was a good guy, and should be remembered as such. Also, acquire the habit of compulsively wiping down your rods. A clean Dewey rod can’t damage a bore.

A 24-inch J Dewey nylon-coated cleaning rod goes for a little under $30. J Dewey

Phosphor-bronze brushes. You are free to use stainless steel if you want to wreck your barrel, or nylon, if you wish to scrub forever and accomplish nothing.

Shooter’ Choice MC#7 Bore Cleaner. This is the best gun cleaning solvent I know of. Also, it will remove anything from anything.

Brownell’s J-B Non-Embedding Bore Cleaning Compound. This paste is the nuclear option for copper fouling. When everything else fails, J-B will get the job done. With J-B should go a can of Kroil, a very thin penetrating oil that you use with it.

Birchwood-Casey Gun Scrubber. Unmatched for flushing out ugh and degreasing*. If they stop making it, I will give up shooting.

Brownell’s Square Patches in the following sizes: #2 (.22-.270), #3 (7mm-.38), #4 (.35 to 20 gauge), #5 (16-12 gauge) #5 HD-3 (12-gauge heavy duty). Brownell’s sells these in packs of 100, or bags of 1,000. You want the latter.

Hoppe’s No. 9 Benchrest Copper Bore Cleaner. In bores of .25 and smaller, scrubbing with J-B is not practical. This will do the job, but it takes time.

Use Hoppe’s No. 9 Benchrest Copper Bore Cleaner for .25 caliber and smaller bores. Hoppe’s

Break Free LP and CLP. LP stands for lubricant/preservative. CLP stands for Cleaner/Lubricant/Preservative. Get one squeeze bottle of each. The spray cans are wasteful.

Q-Tips, paper towels, pipe cleaners. For getting into small spots and wiping off cleaning rods.

A rifle cradle or vise with curved jaws. I like the cradle made by Tipton.

Read Next: Best Gun Cleaning Kits

How to Clean a Rifle Bore in 6 Steps

Step 1: Clean the bolt.

Having made sure the rifle is unloaded, clamp it in the gun vise and remove the bolt. (I’m assuming a bolt-action or an AR.) Put a couple of drops of CLP on a heavy 12-gauge patch and wipe off the bolt. Dip a Q-tip in powder solvent and clean off the bolt face, including under the extractor.

The author uses Shooter’ Choice MC#7 Bore Cleaner to remove powder fouling. Shooter’s Choice

Step 2: Apply powder solvent.

Now, wet a patch with powder solvent, impale it on a jag (do not use a slotted tip) of a size that gives you a snug fit, and run it up the bore. One trip per patch. Do this three times.

Step 3: Scrub the bore.

Dip a clean —I say again, clean, meaning one that you have previously hosed down with Gun Scrubber—bronze brush into the powder solvent and give it 15 strokes each way up and down the bore. Why 15? Why not 15? Do 14 or 16 if it makes you happy. Remove the brush, hose it down again, and put it aside to dry. Wipe off the cleaning rod with a paper towel.

Step 4: Remove the powder fouling.

Take your patch rod, and put three solvent patches up the bore. The last one should come out nearly white. When it does, follow with a dry patch. You are now done with the powder fouling. Wipe off the muzzle with a paper towel to remove whatever gray gravy drooled out the front end.

Step 5: Apply the copper cleaner.

Put a Kroil patch up the barrel. Then take a 12-gauge patch and wrap it around an old, worn-out bronze brush so that it gives you a tight fit in the bore. Take a good-sized glob of J-B out of the jar and work it into the patch. For starters, give it 20 strokes up and down the bore. Don’t let the patch get clear of the muzzle. When you see it start to appear, reverse course and pull it back. After 20 strokes, the patch should turn black.

Work Brownell’s J-B Non-Embedding Bore Cleaning Compound into a patch and run it up and down the bore. Brownell’s

Step 6: Remove the copper fouling.

If you think you’re done, run a solvent patch and then a dry patch up the bore and take a look with your borescope. (Do not get J-B or oil or anything else on the lens of your scope. You will regret it.) If you see no copper, or just a faint wash of copper here and there, you’re done. If you see gobs and gouts and lumps and streaks, it’s back to the J-B. A rough bore can keep you at this forever, and I’ve replaced more than one barrel because cleaning it was just too difficult.

If you don’t have a borescope, run a solvent patch up the bore and let it sit, muzzle slightly down, for a couple of hours. Run another solvent patch through, and if it comes out clean, you’re done, but if it has green or blue stains, back to the J-B.

If you’re cleaning a barrel that’s .25 caliber or smaller, substitute Hoppe’s No. 9 Copper Killer for the J-B. You don’t scrub; you just leave the bore wet overnight and run a new patch through it in the morning. This process can take a week. Hoppe’s, by the way, has a powerful, sickly sweet odor that smells like a Transylvanian whorehouse on Vlad Tepes Day. But it works.

More Notes on How to Clean a Rifle

Some barrels copper-foul much worse than others. As a rule, the more you spend on a barrel the smoother it will be and the less it will foul. But every barrel fouls to one degree or another.

Do break-in procedures work? I doubt it. I’ve had one or two cases where a barrel suddenly began to group as I reached the end of the process, but I’ve had far more break-ins that made no difference at all.

I haven’t mentioned the ammonia-based copper killers like Sweet’s or Barnes CR-10 because I don’t use them anymore. They work, sometimes, but if you forget and leave the stuff in your bore for more than 15 minutes, they will pit your bore but good, and since I’m at the age where I forget stuff, I’m unwilling to take the chance. Also, they’re hell on stock finishes.

With a bolt-action, go easy on the Break-Free. And take care to get nothing at all on the trigger. With an AR, be liberal, and make sure that you do lubricate the trigger with grease, not oil. Geissele recommends ALG Go-Juice 0000 Very Thin Grease, and who am I to argue with Geissele?

ARs, the good ones, can run even when very dirty, but clean them anyway. Civilian autos, like the Remingtons, do not run at all when they get good and dirty. A friend of mine hunted with a Browning BAR that perpetually jammed on him because it was perpetually filthy, and I suggested that it might be nice if he cleaned it once every couple of decades.

Take a cue from the military, whose lives depend on their firearms going bang. They not only learn how to clean their rifles, they learn to make them immaculate. And immaculate is a good way to go.

The post How to Clean a Rifle appeared first on Field & Stream.

Articles may contain affiliate links which enable us to share in the revenue of any purchases made.