Best BP cleaner I have found yet

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I find dihydrogen monoxide mixed with alkalized triglycerides at 120 degrees Fahrenheit or higher temperature is the most cost effective solvent for removing BP residue.;)
 
ROAshooter, you may want to rethink using the dishwasher. Lead deposits on your eating utensils doesn't sound like a good idea.
 
I remove the nipples from the cylinder and drop them, along with the cylinder, in a US cleaner with a drop of dish soap as a wetting agent. While that runs I use Balistol/water to clean the frame then wipe clean with a soft rag. Boiling water down the barrel followed by a Balistol/water soaked patch or 3.

Dry it all off, wipe with Balistol and put back in the safe.

Dave
 
Nom de Forum. No high-school or college chemistry please. I once warned a classmate about dihydrogen monoxide and how it killed everyone who has ever contacted it. BTW, I generally use the same chemical composition. Perhaps I should bottle it and sell it at Rendezvous?
 
Nom de Forum. No high-school or college chemistry please. I once warned a classmate about dihydrogen monoxide and how it killed everyone who has ever contacted it. BTW, I generally use the same chemical composition. Perhaps I should bottle it and sell it at Rendezvous?

Please be careful using dihydrogen monoxide. It is historically the most powerful of solvents and is as deadly as you mentioned.;)
 
Oh you mean this dihydrogen monoxide????? :eek:

The dihydrogen monoxide hoax involves calling water by the unfamiliar chemical name "dihydrogen monoxide" (DHMO), and listing some of water's effects in an alarming manner, such as the fact that it accelerates corrosion and can cause severe burns. The hoax often calls for dihydrogen monoxide to be regulated, labeled as hazardous, or banned. It illustrates how the lack of scientific literacy and an exaggerated analysis can lead to misplaced fears.

Here,

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dihydrogen_monoxide_hoax
 
Oh you mean this dihydrogen monoxide????? :eek:

The dihydrogen monoxide hoax involves calling water by the unfamiliar chemical name "dihydrogen monoxide" (DHMO), and listing some of water's effects in an alarming manner, such as the fact that it accelerates corrosion and can cause severe burns. The hoax often calls for dihydrogen monoxide to be regulated, labeled as hazardous, or banned. It illustrates how the lack of scientific literacy and an exaggerated analysis can lead to misplaced fears.

Here,

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dihydrogen_monoxide_hoax

Curses foiled again, you're on to me.:D

We used to keep a bottle of Dihydrogen Monoxide on the shelf at one of the places I worked. It was labeled similarly to what you posted. It gave us a few cheap laughs at the expense of newbies. Ah, the things we do for fun in our youth.
 
I bet you guys had a lot of laughs at lunch time with the newbies. That's funny!! :D

We once wrote a gag eval for a new third class petty officer, it went something like this, inability to say train with saying cho cho first or inability to say dog without saying puppy first. It went on and on.
 
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