need help

Goshinki

New member
I like to to care of all my firearms myself but my collection has got a bit large and I'm scared to take them apart and really clean them without a diagram on them and was I hope someone here can point me to a website that has a large selection of images of a majority of the firearms some are old some are new like the oldest i have is a a is a 1900-1910 12 gauge and the newest is a 2010 dmps ar-15 7.62x39 so yeah any help would be great and i need them for rifles shotguns and handguns
 
I cant really understand what EXACTLY your asking, the wording is a bit off. If your asking on information on where to learn how to clean a firearm you have - i suggest you use a google or youtube search on the exact name of the firearm you wish to clean. Most of the time there is someone who has posted good instructions on how to do it.
 
Its my experience that guns usually don't have anything that pop out or explode. Once you get an idea of how guns work, you should be able to take any of them apart. I know what you mean, I took apart one of my shot guns recently and forgot that it has a little trick to getting the bolt out, but i got it. Just spend time with each after you shoot it.


Youtube usually has videos for most guns.
 
to the last 3 people who posted that is what i was asking for i dont want to take these guns apart without knowing whats in it and how it goes in it and where and if theres a trick to it and thank ya'll im checking out link now


link is what im looking for but alittle more wider content like i need to list like dpms ar-15 7.62x39 and a colt 1911 pistol
 
If you broke down a gun for cleaning far enough that you needed an expoded veiw to get it back together than you went way way too far. I haven't seen a gun that needed broke down that far even if you dumped it in a vat of mud.

LK
 
Most of 'em only need Basic Field Strip for cleaning...it is only Rarely that a Full Detail Strip is ever needed.

Heck, buy a can or three of Powder Blast from CLP, hose down the action parts until clean, clean the barrel & receiver, let it all Air-Dry overnnight...
then shoot with CLP the next day, and let that air-dry overnight & stick back in...

I usually only do a full detail strip when replacing all the springs in a used gun, or its having issues and something has to be replaced...
 
A lot of diagrams at Brownells also. I've even had luck calling or emailing the manufacturers and asking nicely. It helps if you say something like "the ugly roll mark on my barrel says not to use this thing without the manual, where do I get one?"
 
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