Gun Cleaning....love it or hate it?

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Airedale1

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After a great day at the range with my buddy, we parted ways and I expressed that I was looking forward to getting home and cleaning my weapons. Well, he looked at me like I was crazy and he told me how much he dreaded having to clean his.

I don't know about you but I've always enjoyed the entire process of disassembly, cleaning and reassembling my weapons. I dont know what it is but I've always found it to be a very relaxing, enjoyable and comforting process. I've never viewed it as a chore. What are your thoughts on it?
 
Don't care for it.

I shoot multiple guns weekly year round. I don't clean them until they start to give me malfunctions or accuracy problems or I get tired of getting soot all over my close. I have a few that I have intentionally never clean to see how long they can go.
 
Don't care for it.

I shoot multiple guns weekly year round. I don't clean them until they start to give me malfunctions or accuracy problems or I get tired of getting soot all over my close. I have a few that I have intentionally never clean to see how long they can go.
Same here. Used to clean every gun every time it was shot. Then I started getting and shooting a lot more guns more often. Now I wipe off the fingerprints and keep them lubed, and detail clean when I feel guilty or they start having malfunctions.

I clean thoroughly after corrosive or BP loads.
 
I enjoy cleaning but i probably wouldn’t if I was using the kitchen table. I have a shop and a dedicated bench for cleaning, smithing and other stuff. I jack up the stereo and might have a wee dram of corn squezzins and live in the moment.
 
I would guess that a lot of people who clean after every range trip either don't go to the range that often and/or don't shoot that many guns when they do.

I also was taught by my dad that "you have to clean a gun everytime you shoot it". I learned later in life that dads are sometimes wrong...lol.
 
I clean a lot because I hand load and want to see if I'm damaging the gun. I look for things like Pitts on the bolt face, and excessive carbon from the powder or a specific load. Some guns are easy to clean and some a ptia. My mini-14 is a pain to clean so I don't shoot it often. My marlin lever guns are one screw and ready to field clean in less than a minute. Before I traded away my glock, I loved how easy it was to clean. So I shoot and clean guns that are easily maintained.
 
I don’t clean every time I shoot. If I did it would suck. I clean when I’m in the notion. And I do enjoy it.

But I do wipe my gun off every time I shoot. Wipe the soot and finger prints, reoil. For my single actions I remove the cylinder and wipe the soot. But for others I just get it the best I can with the action open.

I wipe the fingerprints off and reoil a couple times a week, or weekly for sure,on my carry gun if it’s blued. For stainless I’ve went a few months between any maintenance or shooting so much that I had rust causing malfunctions. But that was a 1911. It became to me just a tool, like a glock, after years of carrying it. Not like a revolver though, that is a fine personal weapon to be cherished and cared for.
 
I can't say that I am really crazy about it but I regard it as a necessary part of the sport of shooting. It is certainly easier than changing the oil and filter on your vehicle which is a necessity of vehicle ownership. Ignoring either is going to cost you money in the long run.
 
For a while I ran gun cleaning day once a week at my house. Tried to get friends to come over and have a gun cleaning party. Pizza, coke, tales of the gun on the tube. Nobody was interested. I had a friend come, he cleaned his gun as quick as possible and was like I’m done I got to go. I was thinking, it’ll be fun. In the end, I’m the only one that didn’t HATE cleaning their guns.
 
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Some guns are a chore. Others are a joy. My G19 easy. My hi point carbine. Little more involved. When I had a high point c9 It was a chore.
 
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