One of these days I need to try WD-40, which I hear so many good things about.
~Kees~
You really should give it a try. I used to wipe my guns down liberally with WD-40 to remove fingerprints and would even spray it directly onto actions and trigger components. Later, a locksmith set me straight- she hated the stuff because it can purportedly gum up and varnish over time- so I stopped using it as a lubricant. Can't say I ever experienced that in the many years I had used it, but her warning was enough to make me rethink my process. That said, WD-40 shines when it's used for what it was actually designed to do: displace water before proper lubrication and protect against rust.
I really like to utilize it for my lock cleaning also. I run my locks under the sink with a drop of dish soap and scrub them with a toothbrush. After that, I blow them dry with compressed air, give them a light spray of WD-40, and blow them off again. Once the moisture is fully displaced, I follow up with a very light mist of Ballistol and a small dab of grease on the moving parts. Done deal-- ready to go. Probably sounds more involved than it really is-- in reality, it takes all of about five minutes, if that.
For anyone who isn't aware, WD-40 was originally developed to protect the outer skin of the Atlas rocket (the first ICBM) from corrosion. Used in the role it was intended for, it works exceptionally well.
There are about a million and one ways to clean a muzzleloader, and just about everyone is convinced their method is the right one. In reality, most of those methods work just fine, because they're all trying to accomplish the same handful of critical tasks-- just in different ways.
At the end of the day, effective muzzleloader maintenance really comes down to three fundamentals. First, you need to neutralize and remove the corrosive black powder residue. Second, you must make absolutely sure that any water used during cleaning is fully driven out, especially from the breech area and other tight recesses where moisture loves to hide. And finally, you need to leave the metal properly protected with an appropriate oil or grease for long-term storage. Pretty basic stuff.
How you get there- hot water or cold, soap or no soap, patches or dunking the barrel- is largely a matter of personal preference and experience. What matters far more than the specific ritual is that these three goals are met every single time. If you accomplish that, your muzzleloader will stay clean, rust-free, and ready to shoot, regardless of which "best" method you swear by.
Whew! I'm sorry... that was a novel.
