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Started by worth612000, April 20, 2023, 12:39:43 AM
Quote from: zelmo1 on April 21, 2023, 09:12:22 AMLots of good stuff here. I am overly cautious and do it all, lol. Clean thoroughly, a dab of choke tube lube and 1finger tight, as tight as you can possibly get with no mechanical aid. I inspect it visually often. Your choke tube is part of the gun, so do the maintenance. Z
Quote from: old3toe on April 21, 2023, 01:05:07 AM When I clean my turkey guns I remove the aftermarket chokes and put an improved cylinder or modified choke in the barrel. Deep clean as usual and then clean the turkey chokes with brake cleaner and a toothbrush or other similar brush that will fit. Then I remove the more open choke and clean the barrel threads sqeaky clean then lube threads with breech plug grease and put choke back in. Then clean the open choke threads I just took out. It amazes me at the people that don't remove their choke tubes and clean their threads and chokes regularly. I've seen alot of stuck chokes in shotgun barrels. Even with as little as 4-5 shots there is a certain amount of debri, powder, or gases that end up around the edges of the choke tubes. And that's not to mention moisture from rain or snow and the barrel sweating. It's easy to see too. The breech plug grease I've been using for years is white. After I completely clean my gun, choke, and threads and apply fresh white grease, I can shoot three or four shots maybe a few more then remove the choke and see what color the grease is. It's usually a dingy brown then by seasons end it'll be black. It doesn't take much to cease these fine threads up.