Hi MM,
I shoot quite a bit and I remove my barrel for cleaning after every outing. Full stock Lancaster rifle. I built a cradle out of 2x6's to sit my rifle in while I work on it. I'll have to dig up a picture. First I remove the lock nails and pull the lock, then remove the barrel tang bolt and push the barrel pins out with a 1/16 punch. Hold the rifle, barrel side down, maybe an inch above the cradle and with a little tap the barrel will fall free. Carefully set the stock aside. Handle it by the wrist, not the fore-end.
I put the breech end of the barrel in a coffee can full of luke warm water with a little of mom's dish soap and pump water in and out with the cleaning rod/jag/patches. That jet spray will clean the inside of the internally coned touch-hole liner. When clean, dry out the water, and finish with Barricade.
After 20 years of this, the pins can get a little loose. Rub the pins on a block of beeswax and shove them in the hole. Pins stay put til the next cleaning.
To each his own.
-Ron
Same here. Barrel comes out for cleaning after every use. Pins are still tight after 4 years of use, or whenever it was I bought the rifle from Jim C. Only my .36 has pins. BW
works well to tighten slightly loose screws - did that for years on the other flinter. Taylor instructs - yes- TEACHES all of his 'clients' to remove the barrel for cleaning, by showing them
how.
The Verner has keys - 4 of them. That barrel comes off for cleaning every time. I am of the very strong opinion you cannot get the barrel CLEAN without this process. Pouring
water into a vent-plugged bore, then patching it out, repeated several times might get the barrel as clean, but I do not believe that.
When using a container of water, sucking the water into the bore to full, then forcing/blasting that barrel full of water back out the vent really cleans it and the breech face.
I leave the rifle's rod in the stock while cleaning the barrel. These 2 flint stocks of mine are quite fragile without the barrels in them, so I take the requisite care - no problem.
The short, 1/2 stock hooked breech English fowler is a POC to clean - (piece of cake)
My dismantle is the same sequence as Ron's. Lock first, then tang screw, then pins. With the hooked breeches, no tang screw removal.