Finally getting around to cleaning some suppressors. Ung! Fun toys, but NO FUN to clean.
Anyway, been reading up on alternative methods of getting the chore done better/more easily, and learned about Ed's Red. It seems like the thing to use to make my life easier. Just curious about what y'all have done to soak your suppressors to clean and pre-treat the baffles for easier cleaning later. Mine are all aluminum, with the exception of the STDA booster.
A lot of folks apparently leave out the acetone component in the original recipe because its function back in the day was to dissolve shotgun wad plastic residue. But today, poly-coated cast bullets are popular and getting more so, and I wonder if I should include the acetone for that reason. Is the polymer used for coating bullets of the type dissoluble by acetone? Does it even deposit inside suppressors to any degree worth worrying about? I'm hoping when the ammo panic subsides at some point in the future to get my hands on the CCI poly-coated .22 stuff, cause these .22 suppressors are fuggin clogged, Maynard!
Also, if you don't depend on leaving Ed's Red inside the can as a pre-treat to help prevent fouling adhering to the innards, what DO you use? (These are .22 and 9mm cans I'm referring to.) I've heard silicone-based lube works best, others say lithium.
Anyway, been reading up on alternative methods of getting the chore done better/more easily, and learned about Ed's Red. It seems like the thing to use to make my life easier. Just curious about what y'all have done to soak your suppressors to clean and pre-treat the baffles for easier cleaning later. Mine are all aluminum, with the exception of the STDA booster.
A lot of folks apparently leave out the acetone component in the original recipe because its function back in the day was to dissolve shotgun wad plastic residue. But today, poly-coated cast bullets are popular and getting more so, and I wonder if I should include the acetone for that reason. Is the polymer used for coating bullets of the type dissoluble by acetone? Does it even deposit inside suppressors to any degree worth worrying about? I'm hoping when the ammo panic subsides at some point in the future to get my hands on the CCI poly-coated .22 stuff, cause these .22 suppressors are fuggin clogged, Maynard!
Also, if you don't depend on leaving Ed's Red inside the can as a pre-treat to help prevent fouling adhering to the innards, what DO you use? (These are .22 and 9mm cans I'm referring to.) I've heard silicone-based lube works best, others say lithium.