Cosmodragoon
New member
Alright. I'm normally a pretty civilized guy. This marks my first angry post. I have a bunch of revolvers and I enjoy shooting each and every one. Today, I did something unusual and shot three of them. It was a blast. Then I got home...
I set out on the porch to clean them. I had to clean a total of 3 barrels and 20 chambers. The mosquitoes really started to gorge themselves on me but I didn't want to leave them dirty overnight. As it got worse, I started to hustle. Every patch just kept coming back so dirty, I had to remember not to skip anything, and I was being eaten alive. Just as I got to my cheap-O 7-shot .32, I noticed that the barrel had worked itself a little loose. I just about lost it!
Of course, that loosening barrel isn't the issue here. (I think the body of that old Arminius is zinc or something.) What I do need is to find a better way to clean wheel guns. I own a Dremel but I've read warnings against using them here. I got to thinking though... If you attached a soft patch or even a bronze brush to a rotary bit, could it really damage steel? I mean, that same steel takes long bouts of vigorous scrubbing with elbow grease without any apparent damage. The Dremel can't scrub any harder than I do. It's just faster. I imagine that it could cut time down by more than half. So, what's the risk?
Beyond that question, do any of you experienced shooters have tricks and methods that make life easy?
I set out on the porch to clean them. I had to clean a total of 3 barrels and 20 chambers. The mosquitoes really started to gorge themselves on me but I didn't want to leave them dirty overnight. As it got worse, I started to hustle. Every patch just kept coming back so dirty, I had to remember not to skip anything, and I was being eaten alive. Just as I got to my cheap-O 7-shot .32, I noticed that the barrel had worked itself a little loose. I just about lost it!
Of course, that loosening barrel isn't the issue here. (I think the body of that old Arminius is zinc or something.) What I do need is to find a better way to clean wheel guns. I own a Dremel but I've read warnings against using them here. I got to thinking though... If you attached a soft patch or even a bronze brush to a rotary bit, could it really damage steel? I mean, that same steel takes long bouts of vigorous scrubbing with elbow grease without any apparent damage. The Dremel can't scrub any harder than I do. It's just faster. I imagine that it could cut time down by more than half. So, what's the risk?
Beyond that question, do any of you experienced shooters have tricks and methods that make life easy?