.22 lr cleaning

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  • barretcreek
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2013
    • 6065

    #1

    .22 lr cleaning

    What is your cleaning routine for .22 lr rifles and pistols and what do you use? Interested in bringing the target rifles out of hibernation.
  • lyman
    Administrator - OFC
    • Aug 2009
    • 11266

    #2
    for target guns,

    if they have been in storage, a good once over and general clean,
    punch the bores with hoppes , brush, and then dry patch till almost clean,


    shoot,,, often, and don't clean the bore again unless groups go wonky,


    learned that from several Smallbore guys

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    • High Plaines Doug r
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2009
      • 267

      #3
      I don't try to scrub the barrel on my .22lr guns maybe 5-10 passes per match with a bronze brush and a little Hoppies or GI bore cleaner but I do try to scrub the chamber especially of the semi-autos a little bit. The rest is just wiping grit off the bolt face and Breech and maybe fingerprints off the rest.
      Last edited by High Plaines Doug r; 10-02-2022, 06:50.

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      • Art
        Senior Member, Deceased
        • Dec 2009
        • 9256

        #4
        I clean my .22s a lot more than most but it's pretty perfunctory. After a range session one pass with a brush soaked in solvent, dry patch, patch barely damp with CLP. Wipe down metal with a a sightly oily rag.

        Yeah, everyone here will say I clean the bore too much.

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        • Fred Pillot
          Senior Member
          • Sep 2009
          • 448

          #5
          Don't listen to this BS. A bronze brush will screw up your barrel way faster than any lead bullets you will fire through it. Use solvent, and if you need to scrub in the throat, use a nylon brush with a patch soaked with solvent. Work slow, slow. Over time, the lead will come out.
          Fred Pillot
          Captain
          San Jose Zouaves
          1876

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          • Pete D.
            Junior Member
            • Dec 2014
            • 6

            #6
            .22s are easy. As noted in the post #2, the procedure is simple. Beyond pulling a boresnake through the barrel after shooting there is little to do. I have two very nice target rifles, an Anschutz biathlon rifle and a Feinwerkbau rifle that I use for smallbore prone. Wipe down the outsides of the guns, boresnake and a little oil, put away.

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            • bruce
              Senior Member
              • Sep 2009
              • 3759

              #7
              Cleaning .22 LR firearms is not do difficult. A properly sized cleaning patch dampened w/ solvent is pushed through the chamber and bore followed by a dry patch. If there is buildup of lube on the muzzle, wipe it off w/ the damp patch. That's about it for a bolt-action of single shot firearm. For a semi-auto, you will need to give attention to the bolt face and breech wiping away any fouling, etc.
              A soft brush may be useful for small hard to reach areas. If fouling is hardened, remove it with a brass scraper. Wipe the exterior of the firearm down with an oiled cloth. If dealing with a revolver, you will need to also give attention to the ejection system. There is little to do on a single-action. On a double-action, you will want to wipe out under the ejector star, etc. From time to time you may also want to use a phosphor-bronze brush to clean the charge holes in the cylinder. This will make loading/ejection easier. HTH. Sincerely. bruce.
              " Unlike most conservatives, libs have no problem exploiting dead children and dancing on their graves."

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