Good solvent for plastic fowling?

Willie Lowman

New member
15 years ago my dad gave me a NEF rifled 20 gauge. Since then it's been passed around the family for everyone's first deer gun.

The gun came back to me recently. There is a great deal of plastic in the rifling from all the sabot slugs that have been down it's pipe. I have tried cleaning with patches and Gunzilla solvent. It didn't seem do much to the plastic. Is there a good solvent to get plastic out of rifling or is this a elbow grease kinda thing?
 

Virginian

New member
I have never had to get rid of any plastic fowl, but WD-40, a brief soak, and a bore brush get my barrels mirror clean.
 

FITASC

New member
Any good solvent, even brake cleaner will work. Ed's had acetone in it - plug the barrel, fill it up and let it sit (preferably outside with lots of fresh air)
Even WD-40 will work. Brush on a rod chucked in a cordless drill will make short work of it.
 

HiBC

New member
The wads used in shotguns are polyethylene or polypropylene.Both of those are inert to any solvent I know of.Acetone,MEK,Meth Chloride,TCE,etc will not touch Polyethelene or polypropylene.
Those solvents are volatile,not good for you,and not so good for guns.

What you need is a penetrating oil.Kroil,PB Blaster,etc will work as well as anything.And a brush. And some time.Get it wet,let it soak.Scrub a little,get it wet again.

I have gone to the Scheumann Barrel website a number of times to bring back a link about barrel cleaning.Particularly,why its a very bad idea to use Chlorinated hydrocarbons such as brake cleaner in barrels.Scheumann referenced an article written by Mr Borden of Precision Shooting magazine.

It has to do with sulphur as a component of the steel for free machining properties. Sulphur is present in many barrel steels.Chlorinated hydrocarbons attack this sulphur,and are bad for the steel.

You may do as you wish,but when top barrelmakers and benchrest shooters tel me don't use brake cleaner in a barrel, ......I don't.
 

Jim Watson

New member
I have soaked a trap gun barrel after a 500 target weekend with WD40, let it stand, scratched it up with a brush, let it stand some more, and patched out dissolved or suspended wad plastic like black syrup.
 

BigJimP

New member
Shooters Choice...shotgun and choke tube cleaner works real well...to get the plastic residue out ...( spray it and let it sit for a few minutes / and just brush it out ).

Its also a good choice because it won't attack the finish on your wood stocks.
 

dgludwig

New member
QUOTE: "...I have never had to get rid of any plastic fowl."

Me neither. The more decoys, the better! :)

I agree with BigJimP's advice: Shooter's Choice choke tube cleaner and a little elbow grease will remove any plastic residue.
 

osbornk

New member
I've learned something today that had never occurred to me. I bought my first rifled slug shotgun on Sunday that uses sabot slugs. I have not shot it yet because there are no sabot slugs available locally. I will keep an eye on the barrel.
 

dahermit

New member
I had a Browning SxS that I brought with me to Southern Michigan (in '86) from up near Ludington. When I got to where I was going, I noticed that there was what appeared to be leading in the barrels. Scrub as I might with Hoppe's #9, I could not remove it. Then one day it dawned on me...shotshells have used plastic wads for years and as such there should not be any "leading" in the barrels. I did a little research and found that Shooter's Choice advertised that it removed "plastic" fouling. Trying it, I noticed that after a wet patch was run through the barrels and the Shooter's Choice was allowed to sit for a few minutes, looking through the bores I could see that the plastic fouling had become all wrinkled. When I pushed a dry patch through the bores it was covered with a Black mass of soft gunk. From that point on, I never tasked Hoppes with removing plastic fouling...I don't know if they changed their formula since then to work on plastic fouling, but I lost faith in them (nevertheless, I still use Hoppe's #9 for cleaning the carbon gunk that accumulates in the guns when shooting cast lead bullets in my autos and revolvers...it still seems good for that).
 

FITASC

New member
After you spray your barrels with whatever solvent you decide, take an oversized bronze brush on a cleaning rod with the handle cutoff, chucked in a cordless drill and run it up and down a few times - no need to wait hours or days, the friction generated by the the heat of the brush coupled with the lubricity of the oil/solvent on the plastic will have it spiffy and shiny in seconds flat...........:cool:;)

This also works wonders for choke tubes - but if you hold the tube in your hand, a leather glove does well to prevent burning your fingers
 

Bill DeShivs

New member
For those posters that DON'T READ the original post: He is talking about a rifled barrel.
Never use a brush on a drill in a rifled barrel-as I have already stated.
 
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