The ''post lead'' jacket!?


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P95Carry
February 22, 2003, 01:45 PM
This is hardly a new subject but, always interested to get other's takes on it.

I have met many who, if had a range session using cast bullets, will always put a jacket thru after to ''clean up''!!

I have an opposite view on this ....... using as I do a lot of home cast and loaded ammo ....... .38/357 and 9mm in particular. Whilst my casting alloy is a good hardness there is leading, always, to a degree .. worst in my Blackhawk in fact, partly cos no gas checks and also because I drive em pretty fast!!

My logic tho is ...... after some leading, there will be some residual build up on the main ''driving'' side of each groove .. it can be seen usually. Now if you fire a jacket thru that barrel, that will have to ''fight'' its way down, trying to displace said leading. Fine, as far as a sorta ''cleaning'' might go but ........ and here's the concern ..........

At what cost?? By which I mean pressure ..... I consider this practice to possibly produce a dangerous pressure peak, in particular with my 9mm's ... where anyways we use a pretty high pressure round by design.

I will always if possible delead before using jackets again .. and often use the Hoppes deleading gauze tool ... works well and better IMO than just chemical disolution. Talking of which .. what are your favorite deleading liquids??

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Edward429451
February 22, 2003, 01:53 PM
You make a valid point. I've thought the same thing. On range trips I always shoot any jacketed stuff first, then go to the lead.

Simple Green cuts it good.

P95Carry
February 22, 2003, 02:22 PM
Simple Green cuts it good. Not sure I know that! We get ''Mean Green'' cleaner from local Dollar general ..... but that is essentially a degreaser/cleaner. Can you elaborate a tad?:)

Chris Pinkleton
February 22, 2003, 04:27 PM
Simple Green is the concentrated version of the cheapo "green" cleaners. I've never tried it on firearms, but it seems to work great on just about anything that I've used it on -- plus it doesn't eat my skin like other powerful cleaners.

Edward429451
February 22, 2003, 08:33 PM
Simple green full strength will eat the anodizing off of aluminum. It safe to soak combat tupperware in though.

Mike Irwin
February 23, 2003, 01:45 AM
Trying to "shoot" leading out is never a good thing. At the very best it simply irons lead firmly into the grooves, making it that much harder to dislodge.

Quantrill
February 23, 2003, 09:29 AM
What Mike Said!!! Quantrill

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