How do you store your ml?


jesse8953

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Good question Jesse, gonna be interested in seeing others replies. Have had similar issues with finding rust in the past and that with different types of preventatives from bore butter to regular gun oils to break free clp.

Used rem oil in the black diamond this last time after I cleaned it, will take it out every month or so and check it.

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I usually turn the gun upside down and let it sit overnight to dry on a floor register in the house. Then I run a patch saturated with bore butter through the barrel and leave it in there. Just use a dry patch to clean the barrel next time I want to use it. Never had a rust problem doing it this way.

Lynn

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it seems like with my blued T/C Encore ProHunter, if I clean it with regular stuff like I would my rifles it'd get a little rusty. I clean it really well like you would any other gun, but I use T/C foaming cleaner (Gun Scrubber) for the barrel and then coat the barrel with a patch of T/C Bore Butter. It seems to keep things from rusting up.

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The trick to using bore butter is to have the barrel absolutely dry before you butter it up. The BB will trap moisture and you could have a mess. I have also used a hair dryer in the past to dry everything out.

Lynn

Done that before too, after washing the barrel in soapy water as hot as it would get.

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To be honest with you all, I have tried something new. A friend of ours from north of the border came over last fall with his TC muzzleloader. After using it he used the TC-17 cleaning patches and seasoning patches. These are pre saturated and very simple and quick. I can't stand not trying something new so I bought the same thing and have cleaned and stored my MZ after using these patches. I checked my MZ tonight and so far so good.

I am always a little reluctant to spill my guts about something new until I am sure it either does or doesn't work. I'll keep you informed. Trust me, if it isn't good I'll be the first to tell you. Kevin's gun looked good and he has been using these for a while now. He is very fussy about his equipment.

I used bore butter on my wifes MZ and the TC-17 on mine so I could draw a comparison. The TC-17 is fast and did really clean the barrel good and easily.

Stay tuned.

Lynn

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most of my bores used dyna tek bore coat which is a ceramic coating inside the bore. Prevents rust - corrosion and makes clean up easier. The guns that do not have this, get montana xtreme conditioner. I am not to big on oil but the Montana stuff has done a good job.

Bore butter - seasoning patches are a waste of money. I will never go that route ever again.

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To be honest with you all, I have tried something new. A friend of ours from north of the border came over last fall with his TC muzzleloader. After using it he used the TC-17 cleaning patches and seasoning patches. These are pre saturated and very simple and quick. I can't stand not trying something new so I bought the same thing and have cleaned and stored my MZ after using these patches. I checked my MZ tonight and so far so good.

The TC-17 patches are all I've ever used on my stainless Encore and have never had a problem with rusting. I also spray some black powder solvent for a couple of the pass throughs. It usually takes about 4-6 patches to get it completely clean. I also carry the patches while hunting and use between shots if I have time. As long as you clean your ml within a day or so of using it, there shouldn't be a problem. However, I don't have experience with blued barrels.

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My flintlocks are Green Mountain barrels and "cured" with TC Bore Butter. When I clean them to store, I clean till patches are clean coming out, then Ill run a patch with rubbing alcohol down the barrel to evaporate any residual moisture. Then a HEAVY coating of Bore Butter. I also use Bore Butter for the lock, outside of barrel, and give the wood a rub down as well, including the ramrod.

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Tried the bore butter buty had less than adequate results with it. Also found it was really hard to clean that stuff out to shoot from a clean bore. My barrels are steel barrels so they do not need cured like a cast frying pan. Since I started using oil to store my guns no problem. I have used CLP, G96, A very good household oil, Remoil and probably others and have not had any sort of rust issue. If I plan on a more long term storage I use more and wet the inside of the barrel and store barrel down with a folded cloth underneath. Most of my front loaders do not get all that much rest but none have any rust either.

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Maybe this is the wrong thing to do for some reason I am not sure. I leave the breech plug out of my Encore when I store it. I did the same thing with my Knight Disc Rifle. I coat the inside of the barrel with Break Free CLP and have not had a problem. When I used to store it with the Breech plug in it would rust in the barrel.

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Cleaning & storing a ML

Maybe it's overkill, but I clean mine thoroughly with PAM, a well-known mixture of peroxide, alcohol and Murphy's oil. After that, I run some Break Free down the barrel and over all exposed metal parts followed by some dry patches down the barrel. After this, I swab with bore butter, leaving the rifling covered with a heavy film of bore butter and the exterior covered with the Break Free.

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As I stated before I do not use bore butter. I only use real bp in my flintlocks, percussion, and inline rifles. I used bore butter for the first couple of years in my flintlocks and got some rusting everytime I did that. I then took to a real cleaning regimin. I probably take 30 to 45 minutes to thoroughly clean my rifles if I am going to store it for any period of time. First I had a real time cleaning that bore butter from the bore. I take the rifle down and clean with HOT soapy water till the patches come out clean. I then rinse in very HOT clean water I rinse till the barrel is warm enough to evaporate the water on the outside of the barrel and feel assured it is doing the same for the inside. I run a dray patch down the barrel and set aside till the lock is completely cleaned. I then use modern solvents on the dry barrel. Mostly use a foaming cleaner that is designed to remove lead, plastic and powder crud. It always amazes me what comes out of what should have been a clean barrel. I then coat the bore with a quality oil nearly to the point of it running out of the bore. I then reassemble the rifle and wipe the outside with oil and store in a humidity controlled gun safe bore down. I have stored front loading rifles for several years and never again had a rusting problem. When I go to use any of my front loaders I first run an alcohol patch and a couple of dry ones to clean out the oil. Use what you want but that is how I do mine.

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