I am at a loss at to why you can't get her clean, Ghall - I don't use soap - just cold water and have no difficulty getting the bore clean. Cleaning only uses one patch when flushing water in an out, barrel off or with the C-clamp thinkie. I run 3 to 5 patches down it after cleaning chaning them until the last patch drags due to a dry bore. The patches for cleaning and drying are all used on a jag and are quite tight fitting. After drying, I heavily spray WD40 down the tube & it sprays out the vent (or nipple seat) when I run the oiling patch up and down the bore. I keep pumping until it stops spraying. When cleaning or oiling with the barrel on the stock, I have a paper towel wadded in the lock mortice to prevent water or oil from soaking the wood. Whe pumping the water up and down the bore (barrel on the stock), I wrap a towel around the muzzel and forend as water spews out to muzzle as the rod is lifted amnd drawing water into the bore. I have never used wet patches for cleaning only as it's almost impossible to clean a bore that way without using copious amounts of patches - ridiculous in my opinion. The only way to clean a bore well, is to pull water into the bore, then flush it out the vent or nipple seat - in-out, in-out, in-out, - probably 20 or more times AFTER the water is being pulled all the way up to the muzzle through the vent or nipple seat. The bore will then be clean and ready to dry. As I've said before, this rarely takes more than 4 patches to get completely dry. The spraying of a LOT of WD40 into the bore, then flushing that out the vent seems to get rid of any vestages of water or moisture left in the bore or breech area. Any patch run into the bore after that comes out pefectly clean - no marks from dirt at all and only the faint impressions in the cloth of the rifling. If I lived in a humid area, I'd then re-dry the bore with a couple patches to pull out the WD40, then use a better rust preventer. Here, or when I lived at the coast, that isn't/wasn't necessary.