Here ya go. Several asked so here it is. You can get a flushing kit from Dunlap Woodcrafts & several other vendors. I do modify mine & take a flat faucet washer like one you use on a outside
faucet. Drill the hole out slightly in the rubber washer, remove the "O"Ring on the
flushing kit & push that washer on there & it seals allot better. I file the U on the cleaning
jig to accept a larger barrel too.
Note: Once you learn this procedure, take ? 20 min to have it clean & done. A Few initial times it will take a lil longer.
Keith
Here goes:
Probably 101 different ways of doing it. Main thing is it be CLEAN & DRY before ya lube it for storage.. Here is how I do it & have done so for many years with success:
I have shot BP for over 40 years & I started shooting flintlocks about 25 years ago & now all my ML rifles but one are flintlocks & all are long rifles but two.
Rifle has the Lock OFF & rifle is upside down in a cleaning cradle with Breech end slightly higher than the muzzle.
I use a good healthy squirt of Dawn dishwater liquid soap or about 2 oz of non-aerosol Ballistol in a gallon of Cold water for the flushing solution. I put the rifle upside down in a cradle & remove the lock & connect the "C" clamp type flush kit & wet a patch, put it on a jag & take it to the breech & back & forth several times to insure the barrel if Full of the solution & let the cleaning rod almost all the way out & let it hang there with the barrel full of the solution. (Make SURE it is all stable & won't fall)
While the barrel is soaking I & clean the lock asm. under faucet with a toothbrush, blow dry with air & or dry with a paper towel & take a tiny screwdriver & work the towel into the cracks & etc., then spray the lock down entirely including the flint, with Barricade Aerosol & pat dry with a paper towel & set aside.
Back to the rifle in the cradle, I go back to swabbing back & forth in full strokes to flush the barrel real good for about 20-30 strokes. Change patches every 5 strokes or so, & do it again, change patches and do it again til I am sure it is clean. Then I take the jag off & put on a breech scraper & check for any fouling. Scrape if necessary & if there is any fouling I put on a Breech Brush & brush the breech. Go back to the jag & wet patch & flush again. Then I swab with a dry patch a time or two.
Then I wad up 2 patches & put them in the bore & shove them to the breech with the jag & hold it there tight with the ramrod & then take a worm & pull it & check it for moisture & fouling. Then I do 2 more. And 2 more if necessary to be absolutely SURE the bore is dry. Use a patch worm on a rod & pull the patches out.
When dry, I squirt a lil Barricade Non-Aerosol in the barrel from a pump spray bottle into the bore, & wet a patch real wet with same non-aerosol Barricade & again swab & force some barricade out the vent hole. (Best lay a rag over it or you may oil yer wifes car as I did)
When I am satisfied it is clean & lubed, I leave a patch wet with Barricade on a jag shoved in the bore, then I leave the rifle in the corner Inverted (Muzzle Down) resting on the cleaning rod. Now I use a 3/8" brass or a 5/16" SS range rod for range & for cleaning. This is NOT a wood ramrod.
I leave it for 3 days inverted in the corner. 2nd day & swab it a few times & put it back in corner. 3rd day I swab it & remove rod & patch. Put the lock back on & close the hammer on a clean dry piece of Tee shirt, to absorb any oil if any is any excessive. Put the rifle away in the safe. (Always leave the frizzen open & the hammer Down)
You can use non-aerosol Barricade as a bore preservative. I used to use non-Aerosol Ballistol & it works good, but I think Barricade is better. (It used to be called Sheath) I have been using the Barricade or Ballistol Non-Aerosol in the bore for about 20 years now on all my ML rifles and have had no problems at all with them. Also I have a Golden Rod in the bottom of the safe so keep humidity down & check it every 2-3 months.
(Also the Ballistol Aerosol is a real good wife repellant, she comes a snooping into the gun room wanting some "honey-do" stuff ?? When ya hear he coming your way just spray a lil of the Ballistol aerosol into the air toward the door & it will ward her off !!)
Some tell me I go to too much detail, I don't know. I do know I don't have any rust in the bores of my rifles, so it must work. I do all the percussion & halfstocks the same way now, just use a different attachment at the nipple.
It is IMPERATIVE that you get ALL of the moisture out of the barrel and at the breech before you put the bore rust inhibitor in the bore, regardless of what you use here. (If you incur a rusting problem, it will be because you didn't get the moisture out & left it trapped under the oil.)
It is IMPERATIVE that you Reswab the bore the 2st day & the 3rd day after cleaning, just to be sure you got it all lubed good & etc.
Remember the rifle is UPSIDE DOWN in the cradle for a Reason. So any water or cleaning solution will not get in under the tang, breech or barrel. It runs down off the barrel.
Good Luck !!
Keith Lisle
http://www.CustomMuzzleloaders.comCustom Muzzleloaders by D.K. Lisle

