| | #1 |
| Senior Member | Woah... So I'm downloading this game demo, right..? So, as I sit and wait for hours on end, I look for a way to use my time wisely. I think to myself "Huh. Maybe I'll take my SKS apart and see if it needs to be cleaned..." So I get it, I pull the cover thing off, get the spring out, and to my surprise, there's, for lack of any word I can think of at the moment, some gooy brown funk on the bolt and bolt carrier... 1. What is this stuff? Cosmoline that missed when I first got it? 2. How do I clean it up good? T_T |
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| | #2 |
| Senior Member | The beginnings of surface rust perhaps? Take some really fine steel wool and rub it off, then put some gun oil on top of that. If you don't specifically have gun oil, sewing machine oil works as well.
__________________ Doing the unexpected makes the unexpected the expected and thus the expected becomes the unexpected. |
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| | #4 |
| Senior Member | I agree with A.H., but not about the cleaner. I'd use mineral spirits and either a brass or a nylon bristle brush. But that's becauuse I'm leery of getting carb cleaner on the stock, not because carb cleaner is bad. |
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| | #5 |
| Senior Member | You might want to take it down to it's smallest parts (it's really a simple gun), and scrub every single part with a good corrosive agent. Then follow up by oiling every moving part (even if you think it's not making contact...if it moves, it's making contact). That's what I do when I'm bored anyway |
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| | #6 | |
| Senior Member ![]() | Quote:
however it works great if you take the rifle out of its stock as I do to clean it
__________________ You can have my gun when you pry it from my cold dead fingers!(Charlton Heston) | |
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| | #7 |
| Senior Member | Take it off the stock completely as Marion suggests and clean the you know what out of it. But trust me, you just might find a little more cosmo after it sits again. Just the way that stuff is sometimes. Seeps out from places you thought you got it all out of. lol
__________________ I'd rather be tried by 12 than carried by 6! |
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| | #10 |
| Senior Member | To be honest, I really DO like the smell of cosmoline...I have a '43 Enfield #4 Mk1* that I restored, and the smell of boiled linseed oil combined with the traces of cosmoline (impregnated into the buttstock) is a pleasant aroma to me. Sounds wierd, but there it is.... ![]() |
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| | #11 | |
| Senior Member ![]() | Quote:
__________________ You can have my gun when you pry it from my cold dead fingers!(Charlton Heston) | |
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| | #13 |
| Senior Member ![]() | May I ask why ? acetone, toluene, and methanol. you read the contents they both have depending on manufacure the same basic contents,neither of which should touch the stock
__________________ You can have my gun when you pry it from my cold dead fingers!(Charlton Heston) Last edited by marion57; 04-05-2008 at 07:43 AM. |
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| | #15 |
| Mr. Fixit ![]() | I'm not pathfinder57, but brake cleaner is formulated to evaporate much faster than carb cleaner which is designed to soak into, and dissolve heavy deposits. I like 'em both depending on the application at hand.
__________________ Don't be messin' with my gun! |
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| | #16 |
| Senior Bear Fluffer ![]() | OK, So if that be the case, is Gun Scrubber (GS) closer to carb cleaner (cc) or closer to Break Cleaner (bc) ? I keep seeing GS and CC at the soda shop drinking out of the same soda but there are reports of GS and BC up on lookout mountain! What gives?
__________________ "Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati" (If all else fails play dead) |
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| | #17 | ||
| Senior Member ![]() | Quote:
Quote:
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__________________ You can have my gun when you pry it from my cold dead fingers!(Charlton Heston) Last edited by marion57; 04-05-2008 at 05:26 PM. Reason: Automerged Doublepost | ||
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