bolt lube
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Should your post be in Grumpy Old Men? This area is for general shooting related posts only please.
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- dromia
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Re: bolt lube
Surely the bolt lugs are self lubing, whatever liquid you pout down the barrel for cleaning usually mixes with the fouling in the receiver ring to form a slurry that is impossible to remove so obviously the ring is designed to keep the stuff there and the bolt lugs just ride happily on this.
Of course with an Enfield action you don't have the bolt lugs in the receiver problem and normal after cleaning lubing works just fine with them.
Of course with an Enfield action you don't have the bolt lugs in the receiver problem and normal after cleaning lubing works just fine with them.
Come on Bambi get some
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Re: bolt lube
I have never had a bolt with varnish on it.WD40 + 3 weeks = Varnish! - for use on cars in a garage, not guns in an armoury. aaarggh

Re: bolt lube
Mil-Comm TW-25B - it is all I have used for many years and seems to last forever.
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Re: bolt lube
+1 for that.Ovenpaa wrote:Mil-Comm TW-25B - it is all I have used for many years and seems to last forever.
- snayperskaya
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Re: bolt lube
The other lube I've started using is Ballistol which seems good so far and also give my stocks a nice shine as well.
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Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank.....give a man a bank and he can rob the world!.
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Re: bolt lube
On the us forums I use they have put this stuff through a spectrometer and iirc its just coconut oil alledgedlyAlpha1 wrote:Froglube from Lantac is the nearest you will get to it.
http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2016 ... not-frogs/
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Re: bolt lube
Any decent grease is better than nothing. Products like Froglube are more geared to lubing semi-autos.
We're simply talking about two steel surfaces (bolt and action lugs) in hard contact - after being subjected to 50,000psi during the firing process.
Ovenpaa's suggestion is as good as it gets.
Would you run your car engine without oil? Never run a dry bolt.
We're simply talking about two steel surfaces (bolt and action lugs) in hard contact - after being subjected to 50,000psi during the firing process.
Ovenpaa's suggestion is as good as it gets.
Would you run your car engine without oil? Never run a dry bolt.
Re: bolt lube
Ill stick to my WD 40.
- phaedra1106
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Re: bolt lube
Safariland Break Free CLP, put a very small drop on my finger and rub all over the bolt/lugs to give a very fine coating.
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Re: bolt lube
If using a wet grease is going to make it look bad, catch dirt etc. Why not use a dry grease such as graphite? Literally just draw on it with a pencil. It's a great lubricator as it's essentially carbon, which is a self lubricator aswell!
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