A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
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- Silent But Deadly
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A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
It is near the bottom of the article. Search for "Silicon" to find it quickly. The man claims heating clean .22 suppressor parts and dipping them in silicon oil results in parts that resist lead/carbon fouling accumulation. It is not clear from the review how many cleaning sessions this is good for, but I thought it worth bringing up here.
http://www.rrdvegas.com/silencer-cleaning.html
http://www.rrdvegas.com/silencer-cleaning.html
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Very interesting. Thanks for posting the link.
- Bendersquint
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Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Will read the article in a bit.
He says the Axiom is the best rimfire silencer ever made...cautious of his other comments now.
He says the Axiom is the best rimfire silencer ever made...cautious of his other comments now.
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
I find that moly dry film lube works for me.
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
I'm just coating baffles with froglube paste. Looking fwd to reading that article...
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Any thoughts as to whether DOT 5 brake fluid (his source for silicon oil) is safe for the various metals (stainless, aluminum, titanium) that are likely to be found in rimfire and handgun suppressors? Not being a chemist, I'd hate to find out that it eats aluminum.
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Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Hmm. I thought his review of the Anschutz MSR rx22 was good.Bendersquint wrote:Will read the article in a bit.
He says the Axiom is the best rimfire silencer ever made...cautious of his other comments now.
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Most enlightening and informative article.
Thank you for pointing it out.
Thank you for pointing it out.
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Interesting.
Is heating really necessary? Does it provide that much benefit over a cold application?
What, if any, are the concerns about inhaling vaporized brake fluid?
Is heating really necessary? Does it provide that much benefit over a cold application?
What, if any, are the concerns about inhaling vaporized brake fluid?
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Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
I doubt that there is any vaporization. Silicon brake fluid has a minimum boiling point of 500 degrees and the method described in the article involves heating the parts to only 250 degrees. As soon as you pull the tray of parts from the oven, they start cooling rapidly, so the solution would always be at least 250 degrees below boiling.doubloon wrote:Interesting.
What, if any, are the concerns about inhaling vaporized brake fluid?
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
It won't be after you run a few mags thru it at the range. A hot suppressor will easily clear 500 degrees.savage54 wrote:I doubt that there is any vaporization. Silicon brake fluid has a minimum boiling point of 500 degrees and the method described in the article involves heating the parts to only 250 degrees. As soon as you pull the tray of parts from the oven, they start cooling rapidly, so the solution would always be at least 250 degrees below boiling.doubloon wrote:Interesting.
What, if any, are the concerns about inhaling vaporized brake fluid?
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Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Silencer Shop seems to think highly of it, suggested it to me over the Sparrow and the Spectre, even though both were in stock and it was not. I picked it up Sunday, be curious to hear it next to another can.Bendersquint wrote:Will read the article in a bit.
He says the Axiom is the best rimfire silencer ever made...cautious of his other comments now.
Proper grammar is awesome.
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Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
My phone doubled on me.
Last edited by ThaDoubleJ on Wed Mar 04, 2015 1:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Proper grammar is awesome.
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Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Brake calipers are aluminum, pistons are steel, seals and lines are rubber.savage54 wrote:Any thoughts as to whether DOT 5 brake fluid (his source for silicon oil) is safe for the various metals (stainless, aluminum, titanium) that are likely to be found in rimfire and handgun suppressors? Not being a chemist, I'd hate to find out that it eats aluminum.
Proper grammar is awesome.
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Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
...and I thought I shot a lot of 22lr
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
twodollarbill wrote:...and I thought I shot a lot of 22lr
Maybe this guy is responsible for the shortage.
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Even a rimfire?Chuck88 wrote: It won't be after you run a few mags thru it at the range. A hot suppressor will easily clear 500 degrees.
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Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
4 or 5 mags back to back can get it cooking...but not sure to 500deg.TROOPER wrote:Even a rimfire?Chuck88 wrote: It won't be after you run a few mags thru it at the range. A hot suppressor will easily clear 500 degrees.
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Inside the suppressor, not the oven, sorry for not stating what I thought was obvious.savage54 wrote:... would always be at least 250 degrees below boiling.
I was thinking on a pistol host with mini-mags there might be some surface temps inside the suppressor approaching 500 but I can't say I've ever had any of my 22 cans get near 500 on the outside.
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Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
OMG!ThaDoubleJ wrote:Brake calipers are aluminum, pistons are steel, seals and lines are rubber.savage54 wrote:Any thoughts as to whether DOT 5 brake fluid (his source for silicon oil) is safe for the various metals (stainless, aluminum, titanium) that are likely to be found in rimfire and handgun suppressors? Not being a chemist, I'd hate to find out that it eats aluminum.
Are my brakes about to fail?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BDtd2jNIwAU MUSAFAR!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CrOL-ydFMI This is Water DavidW
Complete Form 1s http://www.silencertalk.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=79895
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CrOL-ydFMI This is Water DavidW
Complete Form 1s http://www.silencertalk.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=79895
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
Only if your daily driver is a F1 race car.doubloon wrote:OMG!ThaDoubleJ wrote:Brake calipers are aluminum, pistons are steel, seals and lines are rubber.savage54 wrote:Any thoughts as to whether DOT 5 brake fluid (his source for silicon oil) is safe for the various metals (stainless, aluminum, titanium) that are likely to be found in rimfire and handgun suppressors? Not being a chemist, I'd hate to find out that it eats aluminum.
Are my brakes about to fail?
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
In the NRA action pistol world we have great success with case lube (lanolin and alcohol) to keep comps from crudding up. I bet it would work for 22 silencers as well.
Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
I haven't tried it on my Spectre II yet, but I use EZ Slide graphite based paint on my comps and they don't even get the crud buildup. Its about $5 for a pretty big can available from Implement dealers and farm stores.
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Re: A pre-treating method to reduce .22 suppressor baffle cleaning time seems to have been found.
I understand graphite is a no-no on aluminum. Does anyone know if that also goes for titanium?