Maybe I'm wrong, but we seem to be getting cleaning and break-in sort of jumbled together here... cleaning is a part of breaking in a barrel but they are not synonomous.Wrangler John wrote:Yes, Windex does or did contain ammonia. Glass Plus does not and is clearly labeled as ammonia free. I learned this by cleaning my glasses with Windex, only to find it stripped anti-glare coating off the lenses due to the ammonia. My optician scolded me!Jim White wrote:Does this window cleaner contain ammonia?
I use a squirt of carburetor cleaner, it strips oil based lubes and even some carbon. Patches squeak going down the bore it gets so clean.
Then some recommend using a break in fluid, Pac_Nor recommends Holland's Witch's Brew, and Greg Tannel supplies Grafoil.
Chris At PacNor recommends Holland's Break-in Oil, and not Witches Brew Barrel Cleaner for a barrel conditioner. Greg T's Grafoil is just a form of colloidal graphite to condition a barrel for a first shot or two.
Incidently, breaking in a barrel does not necessarily make a barrel shoot better accuracy-wise. It's long been argued that it improved copper fouling, but in essence a bad barrel that copper fouls is going to continue to foul and an inaccurate barrel will never be accurate....No matter how you deal with them when new...
If you took two barrels and "broke one in" per someone's directions and you just cleaned and shot the other one, if you use a bore conditioner for the first few shots down both barrels you'll probably see little if any difference in the two factory barrels.
Never shooting a dry barrel is the key to how easy a barrel cleans up, and its not important if a strict "break-in" routine was used or not. Like Gale McMillan has been quoted many times as saying, a strict and strenuous break-in routine is a good ways to sell more barrels, and little else.
Use a bore conditioner for the first shot in a clean barrel and a lot of problems never happen that some folks feel should and will happen if you don't break in a barrel.
Try some colloidal graphite in a clean barrel and save a lot of dollars in break-in ammo costs, and you also save barrel life and still get the same copper fouling results in the end with a factory barrel. With a custom barrel that is hand lapped (and in essence "broken-in" by hand lapping), using a bore conditioner is still a must if you want to keep a barrel shooting well over a longer period of time.
JMO - BCB