MG5150 wrote:G’day gents,
It’s pretty standard to get your car serviced every X amount of kms or Y amount of months — just part of keeping it running right.
I also take my guitars in for a professional setup once a year. A good tech checks everything over, makes a few adjustments, and gets it playing exactly how I like it.
That got me thinking — is there something similar for rifles?
Do you take yours to a gunsmith or technician for regular servicing? Is there any sort of rule of thumb for how often it should be done?
Also — I’ve seen a lot of American military movies where guys strip their rifles blindfolded… is that just Hollywood stuff, or is learning to fully strip and reassemble your rifle actually something every hunter should know?
Noob questions, I know — but I’d really appreciate your insights.
Cheers,
MG
I finally got a chance to clean a pile of rifles and pistols today. Dropped out all the internals of the Uberti 1866 to clean out the blackpowder residue and polish all the brass again. Stripped the bolt in the Henry H001 to clean the extractor and ejector as it's been giving me lots of failures to eject properly. The carbon was so hard and thick I had to scrape it off with screwdrivers - 7845rds since I last cleaned it. It's better but still a bit lazy so I might have to let it soak for a day or two if it's still having issues. The CM22M wasn't bad after 1015rds, lots of carbon but fairly well-contained around the breach. And the Hi Power after 1348rds is filthy but not having any issues. Fairly soon I think I'll have to strip out the trigger components for a proper clean, which I'm not looking forward to. I was going to strip out the 1858's but I'm shooting a match on Saturday so I'll leave those until then. Didn't get into the Rossi 1892 because we had to do a trip to collect hay. Because I log every shot I learn when they start having issues so I clean them before they reach that point. On some firearms it might be as little as a few hundred rounds, on others it can be thousands.
I clean them if they get wet, otherwise when they start feeling gritty or start having issues. The bores I clean when accuracy deteriorates.