Black powder clean up

Black powder rifles and pistols, reloading black powder, and other information. The smoky stuff.

Black powder clean up

Post by Noisydad » 12 Feb 2020, 9:30 pm

Over the years I've heard lots of shooters comment that they're interested in trying black powder loaded ammo but a very reluctant to actually have a go because of the clean up "issue". Some are terrified of causing corrosion and others have heard that it's a horrendous amount of work - usually from people that have never done it themselves. It's really not hard at all and I'll go into how to make it easier.
Black powder fouling is nothing more than soot. Lots and lots of soot! About half the powder volume is turned into soot and most of blows out the barrel each shot and can be seen in low light as that beautiful blast of orange sparks and delicious white smoke.
To illustrate how much soot there is, In a muzzle loader for instance, incorrectly managed fouling build up is so rapid that in as little as four shots reloading becomes nigh on impossible. There are ways to manage and reduce the fouling build up in both muzzle loaders and cartridge rifles till it's no longer a problem at all. It mainly comes down to understanding bullet lubes and what they have to do and just plain water.
Black powder fouling is water soluble. You don't need any shop bought cleaning products. You just need water with some detergent in it and regular cleaning patches albeit many more of them.
Fouling management is also one of the functions of an effective bullet or round ball patch lube and I'll mention them separately.
In patched round ball muzzle loaders grease lubed patches are useful for hunting as you'll only fire a few shots at most but as few as four shots and grease lube patches fail to keep the fouling soft. For range shooting and plinking wet patch lubes are unbeatable. There are lots of versions and they all work pretty much as well as each other.
The brew I've settled on is 430 ml water, 60 ml soluble oil (cutting oil), 30 ml liquid soap (eg. wool wash) soak your patches and lightly squeeze them out and using almost dripping wet. The 60th shot is as easy to load as first as each reload wipes the barrel. This brew is also an excellent general purpose BP clean up product.
Cartridge rifles are a little more involved. Aside from providing bullet lubrication, their lubes have to chemically combine with soot and promote moisture absorption to keep the fouling soft. Most BP cartridge lubes are beeswax based and there are as many recipes as their are shooters. Other typical lube recipe ingredients are olive oil, neatsfoot oil, parafin wax. various animal fats (lard) and some have tried engine oil as an ingredient too. Some learned sages say that if you couldnt eat the lube your rifle shouldn't either.
Not all lubes behave the same in all rifles. A lube that's works well in one barrel/bullet/powder combination wont necessarily work in another. Some bullets cant carry enough lube to make it the whole length of the barrel. You can tell if it does or not by looking at the crown of a clean barrel. You should see a star shaped splatter of goo on the crown if there's enough lube.
Humidity also plays a part in keeping the soot soft. You can provide more by blow tubing. Moisture in your breathe will be absorbed by the soot to keep it soft. I hate blow tubing and use it sparingly. In my Sharps .40-65 I can go 40 shots without blow tubing or putting a cleaning rod down the barrel and still have it clean with 6 patches at the end of the day.
I've only briefly covered the black art so far but will try help with answers and info if you're interested. I'm sure other BP shooters here will dive in and help too.
There's still a few of Wile. E Coyote's ideas that I haven't tried yet.
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by No1Mk3 » 13 Feb 2020, 5:34 am

G'day Noisydad,
Have used Wonderlube patches in the past, 50 shot strings no problems. Bit dearer than home made lubes though, and not as quick and easy to get, so back to the home made. As for cleaning, it is almost annoying to hear folk say they are put off by the amount of cleaning needed, when I tell the what I do for a rifle, warm soapy water, bristle brush, couple of patches, boiling water, patches then an oil patch, it is hardly more than what a bolt action needs after a day on the range. The C&B revolver is just as quick and simple with only a screwdriver to remove the grips and a deep side baking tray with soapy water to sit the parts in, they hardly believe me. This is where I challenge them to come shooting with my guns then come and watch me clean them, I have brought a few to the Dark Side like that! Cheers.
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by Gamerancher » 13 Feb 2020, 8:34 am

I'll take cleaning my black-powder rifles after a match any day over cleaning my 7-08 or 6.5 Creedmoor. Black -powder guns take maybe 6 - 10 patches versus 50 - 60 to properly clean the "modern" guns.
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by No1_49er » 13 Feb 2020, 12:03 pm

Smokeless powder is "only a passing fad" :)
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by Oldbloke » 13 Feb 2020, 4:20 pm

Thanks Noisy. That's great info. It'd bloody hard to get good reliable info regarding BP off the net. So this is appreciated. Especially the recipe's.
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by marksman » 13 Feb 2020, 11:36 pm

l've wanted a black powder double barrel shotgun to shoot clays with after shooting one a few times at little river
its not the cleaning that would bother me, l just have to many other things l think l need more at the moment :unknown:
l was shown a photo of darkside double rifle tonight that a bloke was given in 70 cal l believe he said, apparently the owner used it to shoot buff
wish it were me that the rifle was given to :roll: :drinks:
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by gunnnie » 06 Jun 2023, 1:45 pm

Just starting down the BP cartridge rabbit hole.
I'm running Uberti 1866 Yellowboy & an 1873 Brush Popper, both chambered for 44-40. I also run a pair of Pietta Colt copy SAA revolvers in the same chambering.
The powder is Wano PPPg & for the rifle works out at about 23gn with a cardboard wad some lube then one of my cast/powder coated 225gn RNFP projos. These work well with both rifles.
For the pistols it's a slightly lighter load at 18gns with double wads & the same projo.

I've recently bought a Pedersoli 1874 Sharps Boss Gun in 45-70 Govt, with a 34" barrel. It only has the factory Pedersoli vernier tang sight but that will be replaced with a long range MVA sight. I'm yet to work out a BP load for this rifle.
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by deye243 » 06 Jun 2023, 1:57 pm

Gamerancher wrote:I'll take cleaning my black-powder rifles after a match any day over cleaning my 7-08 or 6.5 Creedmoor. Black -powder guns take maybe 6 - 10 patches versus 50 - 60 to properly clean the "modern" guns.

WOW :crazy:
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by bladeracer » 06 Jun 2023, 3:53 pm

deye243 wrote:
Gamerancher wrote:I'll take cleaning my black-powder rifles after a match any day over cleaning my 7-08 or 6.5 Creedmoor. Black -powder guns take maybe 6 - 10 patches versus 50 - 60 to properly clean the "modern" guns.


WOW :crazy:


Yeah, something's not right there. When I shoot black I strip the rifle and thoroughly clean the whole thing of any residue, it's quite a job, and bloody filthy. A couple of smokeless milsurps might occasionally take perhaps ten patches to clean but my modern rifles I only push three of four patches through them. The .22's are much grubbier as I only clean the bores every 1500rds or so, but even those are spotless within a few patches.
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by Gamerancher » 07 Jun 2023, 10:03 am

What's not right? Apart from the fact that the thread is over three years old, did you actually read Noisydads post? :huh:
His post is about fouling control, which is where most folks go wrong with blackpowder.

My reply is referring to shooting blackpowder in my single shot cartridge rifles. (.40-70 and .45-90, both burning 70 grains or more of powder)
At the end of days shooting of 60 rounds or so, my rifles clean up with half a dozen patches. My .45 Gibbs muzzle-loader is just as easy, the old tale about having to take your muzzle-loader in the shower with you is just bullsh!t.
The reason I can do so is due to fouling control.

A day spent shooting silhouette with my 7-08 or 6.5 takes about 50 patches to get all of the carbon and copper fouling out properly.
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by bladeracer » 07 Jun 2023, 11:37 am

Gamerancher wrote:What's not right? Apart from the fact that the thread is over three years old, did you actually read Noisydads post? :huh:
His post is about fouling control, which is where most folks go wrong with blackpowder.

My reply is referring to shooting blackpowder in my single shot cartridge rifles. (.40-70 and .45-90, both burning 70 grains or more of powder)
At the end of days shooting of 60 rounds or so, my rifles clean up with half a dozen patches. My .45 Gibbs muzzle-loader is just as easy, the old tale about having to take your muzzle-loader in the shower with you is just bullsh!t.
The reason I can do so is due to fouling control.

A day spent shooting silhouette with my 7-08 or 6.5 takes about 50 patches to get all of the carbon and copper fouling out properly.


I was referring to _your_ post about needing up to sixty patches to clean a rifle bore, that's extraordinary to me.

I don't see what the time stamp is relevant to, unless you're telling us you've discovered in the interim that cleaning modern rifles isn't actually as hard as you thought. What copper remover are you using that it still takes fifty patches to clean it out?

I clean the muzzleloader thoroughly because it's unlikely I'm going to get it out again within a month or two. If I were going to be shooting it every day it wouldn't get cleaned to the same extent after every session. I enjoy shooting it, I enjoy loading it, and I enjoy trying to get it to hit targets, but I hate the filthy mess that goes with it and the required clean-up afterwards, that is what keeps me from using it more, along with the difficulty of getting blackpowder now. For me, blackpowder is something best suited to range use, not for general use. I like being able to get a rifle out, fire the four or five rounds I might need from it and put it away again, or spend a two hour session practicing in the paddock, without having to clean it afterwards. If I ever get into range shooting I could see me shooting a lot more black, but at the end of the weekend it'll still get the in depth cleaning.
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Re: Black powder clean up

Post by deye243 » 07 Jun 2023, 1:50 pm

Gamerancher wrote:A day spent shooting silhouette with my 7-08 or 6.5 takes about 50 patches to get all of the carbon and copper fouling out properly.

I am saying WOW again :crazy:
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