A 20-step guide to cleaning your stalking rifle properly
How to clean your rifle: You’ve been out with your rifle, had a great day, but it’s come back filthy…
Gun cleaning: I have been told that if I clean my .22 rimfire it will lose its accuracy. Is this true?
Would you like to appear on our site? We offer sponsored articles and advertising to put you in front of our readers. Find out moreQ: I have been told that cleaning a .22 rimfire will affect its accuracy. Is this true or false?
A: There are two schools of thought on the subject of cleaning a .22 rimfire and both have their adherents. (Read how to clean a rifle.)
Here’s what you need to know.
To begin with, most lead .22 rimfire rifle bullets are lubricated, traditionally with tallow but nowadays almost certainly with a substitute grease.
This grease gets into the rifling and prevents build-up of lead as well as combating corrosion.
Therefore you are not doing the rifle any harm by not cleaning it.
I first heard the “never clean” argument when I took up competitive rifle shooting at the age of 15.
We weren’t allowed to clean club rifles more often than about once a year because, senior members said, we would spoil the accuracy.
Consequently, I followed a similar regime when I got a rifle of my own.
The fact is that there are two schools of thought, and both have their adherents.
Then something happened that gave me pause for thought and I reconsidered.
In the early 1980s I wrote a series of magazine articles with members of the England Commonwealth Games and Olympics team, and discovered that most of them cleaned barrels after every session on the range. That interested me.
However there was a significant difference in the reason why. At the beginning of a session they fired at least half a dozen barrel-warming shots into the bank, followed by a number of “sighters” for sight adjustment, before the serious stuff began.
A field shooter does not have that luxury – in fact, he or she expects the first shot from a cold barrel to be accurate.
For field shooting, I suggest infrequent barrel cleaning, followed by zeroing checks to get the barrel “shot in” again. I hope that answers your question.
How to clean your rifle: You’ve been out with your rifle, had a great day, but it’s come back filthy…
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