OCD cleaning after each range trip...or leave it dirty?

The Q-Tip thread was hilariously brilliant...and got me thinking how often and quickly I clean my pistols after range trips. I honestly cannot stand the thought of a dirty pistol after I shoot it. Even my Glock, the gun that can withstand no lube and various water/mud/freezing temp torture tests...I just cannot leave dirty.

I'm curious to see how many folks go RIGHT to the cleaning bench after a range shoot....or skip it and leave it dirty from time to time. Obviously today's ammunition in most popular calibers is non-corrosive so frequent cleanings are more of a preference than a necessity these days.

Right now, I am putting a new Taurus pistol through a 2k round challenge and its already gummed up with carbon after just 500 rounds. Its KILLING me to leave it dirty and track its performance as I reach 2k rounds! I think I need help...
 
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Corrosive ammo guns get cleaned immediately no matter what.....for obvious reasons.

My others usually within a few days get a quick 5 minute or less wipe down and re lube more than anything. Boresnake a few times then wipe down the frame and easy to get parts. Everything 2k rounds or so 4th or 5th trip ill do bit more thorough of a cleaning with q tips and the such.
 
I clean while watching TV,,,

I usually clean that day or the next,,,
My living room is really my leather workshop,,,
I watch DVD's while working and the same while cleaning my guns.

They probably could go a few trips without a clean,,,
But what the heck, the gun cabinet is within arms reach anyways.

It's not so much a question of "why",,,
It's a question of "Why not".

Aarond

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The first time my dad let me shoot a .22 rifle, he also showed me how to clean it afterward, and he told me I should always clean a firearm after shooting. Fifty years later, I am still doing it his way. Is it overkill? Perhaps, but I don't have reliability problems with any of my pistols.
 
Haaa...yeah this wasnt even a consideration in my mind NOT to clean my pistols right after each range shoot until a buddy of mine (former navy) was busting my chops about how I cleaned my Glock and other pistols directly after a shoot. He carries a M&P XD40 and leaves it go for a few range trips I guess to prove its reliability despite carbon build-ups. Basically he was telling me I am OCD and over-do the cleanings and can leave it dirty for a few range trips before cleaning.

But the simple fact is....I LOVE to clean my guns. Its like Zen therapy to me...lol
 
I always clean after a range trip. I know I don't need to, but I enjoy it, and it assures me my gun is clean, and I don't run into the "Hmm, when was the last time this was cleaned?" problem.
 
Basically he was telling me I am OCD and over-do the cleanings,,,

Basically he was telling me I am OCD and over-do the cleanings

I've seen guns fail because they were dirty,,,

I've never seen a gun fail because it was too clean.

Again, I say,,,
Why not?

Aarond

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I used to clean all my guns any time they were used, but I hate it.

After a while, I realized that it was completely unnecessary in most cases. My bolt guns aren't going to quit working because they were fired a few times and not cleaned. Other than a wipe down on the outside with some oil to prevent corrosion, they now get cleaned when accuracy degrades, which isn't very often. My semi-auto shotgun wasn't going to stop working because I fired 25 rounds without cleaning it and it's gone now anyway.

Now, the only gun that gets cleaned every time is my carry gun, a Glock 33. Even that is more of an integrity verification rather than truly for cleaning. I just want to make sure that nothing looks to have undue wear or is broken.
 
aarond said:
I've never seen a gun fail because it was too clean.
It is possible to clean a barrel to death, but you really have to work at it and use the wrong tools and cleaners. So, in general, you're right on about that.

However, I do adhere to the wisdom concerning .22 rifles and pistols. It says to not clean the barrels as often as you might with centerfire arms. You want to leave a little of the lubrication that coats most .22 ammo in the barrel. They do seem to be more accurate using that cleaning regimen. Even so, you have to clean the barrels every once in a while. And this doesn't mean to not clean the action and other parts often enough to prevent any jamming or other failures.
 
I'm follow the leave a little residue in the barrel of a .22, but I have to take a cleaning brush and solvent into the chamber and action and after each session though.
 
Right on fellas. Clean is good...but it sounds like to much with the wrong cleaner can be detrimental to certain parts, mainly the barrel

And I completely admit when I first cleaned my first pistol that I cleaned it to death and didnt have a CLUE as to what needed to be cleaned and how to do it properly. Now I clean my semis mostly with dry towels, wire brushes and q-tips and minimal oil....mainly on the contact points/rails and on top of the barrel where it meets the slide.

I used to literally DRENCH my slide in oil like an idiot....amazed my first Glock23 still fired despite the firing pin channel being completely gunked up. I'll be honest, YouTube videos and various websites/forums have come in very handy over the years.
 
I've never seen a gun fail because it was too clean.

I have.

I can't count how many AR15's and M16's I've seen show up for classes that are so clean that they won't fire.

Most of the time it's because the firing pin was reinstalled incorrectly after cleaning, sometimes it's because the firing pin wasn't reinstalled at all.

It was SOP in my unit to test fire any weapon after cleaning.
 
It wasn't because of cleaning,,,

I have.

I can't count how many AR15's and M16's I've seen show up for classes that are so clean that they won't fire.

Most of the time it's because the firing pin was reinstalled incorrectly after cleaning, sometimes it's because the firing pin wasn't reinstalled at all.

That's a non sequiter,,,
It wasn't because they were too clean,,,
It was because they were improperly reassembled.

Aarond

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My defensive arms get cleaned after they are fired, but not because they are dirty, but just to make sure they are in proper working order. My cleaning involves, stripping, wiping off all the old lube, checking the parts/function, relubing and reassemblying.

Other guns. I don't worry about until they stop working. :D

I never clean the barrel of a .22, I just clean the actions when they get to the point they are choking on unburnt powder.

I have cleaned my Benelli M1 I bought in 2002 a grand total of 2 times. :eek:

Once, right after I got it home to lube it. I cleaned it again last year, because I thought it might be a good idea to do it again so I didn't forget how.:D

All guns do get a wipe down with CLP before going back in the safe though, especially blued guns.
 
I'll clean crud from the action after every range trip. I clean barrels when the accuracy starts to suffer.

After a thorough cleaning where the gun has been disassembled I don't trust it until I've run a few rounds through it for a function test. 3-5 rounds aren't dirty enough to cause a concern and worth it for piece of mind.

Putting it back together wrong may well be my fault and not the guns, but if it has to work, I want to know it will work. No excuses, not even if it's my fault.
 
I've been known to leave guns uncleaned for a few days after a range trip when life gets busy, but they never sit long enough to take any harm from it.

If something isn't going to get shot again anytime soon, it gets cleaned and oiled promptly before it goes back in the safe
 
Most often I clean after shooting them. Occasionally they may wait a day or two but they get cleaned before they are ever taken out again.
 
I've let my guns go up to a week before cleaning them. I don't obsess over it too much, they will eventually get cleaned (when I'm in the mood).
 
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