GTA

All Springer/NP/PCP Air Gun Discussion General => Air Gun Gate => Topic started by: NCmountainShooter on October 21, 2013, 05:43:20 PM

Title: Cleaning Umarex Octane?
Post by: NCmountainShooter on October 21, 2013, 05:43:20 PM
What's the best way to clean the bore on a .22 Umarex octane? I read that I can't push a patch through due to the baffles. It's on the way from Pyramyd as we speak and I want to be able to clean it before I shoot it. I have a coated .22 cleaning rod I use with my AR15. Can I use that with a plastic tip or brush of some kind? I know not to use copper or brass tips or brushes. I read mention of using fishing line tied around patches but not sure if that works in this barrel. Thanks!
Title: Re: Cleaning Umarex Octane?
Post by: palonej on October 21, 2013, 07:33:20 PM
Hey Shooter and welcome!!
I have a TX...also has baffles and I use the Crown Saver. One of the members here sells them....JL is the dude. You get 2 for $15 and they are great!!!
Shoot him a pm and you'll probably get them in time.
Good luck with the new rifle........we like pics!!!! Or we won't believe you!!
Title: Re: Cleaning Umarex Octane?
Post by: smythsg on October 21, 2013, 07:38:04 PM
I had no problem pushing a rod with patches through my Octane. I did push from the breach to the crown, but experienced no issues. I used GooGone until the patches were relatively clean, removed the GooGone with clean patches, then applied light oil, and then swabbed until clean and dry. That is the same as I have used for all my Springers and it seems to work fine for me.
Title: Re: Cleaning Umarex Octane?
Post by: Roadworthy on October 21, 2013, 08:40:55 PM
Hi.  The experienced folk here would go along with the Goo Gone.  They generally recommend fishing line or weed whacker line to pull the patches through the barrel from breech to muzzle.  To make it through the baffles try a soda straw.  Oil in the barrel is not recommended.  It can detonate or diesel due to the superheated high pressure air.  It can also damage seals.  Oil is fine on the metal outside the gun, though.
Title: Re: Cleaning Umarex Octane?
Post by: smythsg on October 21, 2013, 09:04:51 PM
Yes I absolutely agree with Thomas that oil in the barrel is not normally a good thing. I failed to mention that I use oil very sparingly and clean thoroughly afterward.
Title: Re: Cleaning Umarex Octane?
Post by: JR on October 22, 2013, 12:08:47 AM
My .02 on new barrel cleaning

I use a 1 piece carbon fiber or coated Dewey rods on all my air rifles and powder burners. Neither rod will damage any steel barrel even cheap junk steel, I really don't think they would hurt a brass barrel as long as the rod was remotely straight with the bore, gota use a little common sense. I do not and will not use any screw together cleaning rod on any barrel I care about and no one should use any rod that is bent in the least bit. It takes next to nothing for a bend in a rod for it to rub while inside of a .177/.17 barrel, a bare steel rod will damage the rifling. I don't know of any new gun/barrel I have got that was spotless including $500 match grade Shilen, Hart, or Douglas barrels. I have misc. tips, mops, jags that I use but all barrels get lapped at least a few patches with JB bore paste. A Parker Hale style jag works the best for keeping the patch stuck on the jag and not loosing it or a nylon brush with the patch over it. A .17 cal nylon brush with a patch over it fits good in a 22 cal. barrel The parker Hale style jags have knurling and are longer vs common jags that have a pin at the end to hold the patch and are smooth that only work to push the patch not pull it back. I have a older Dewey knurled jag set with pointed tips not pin/piercing tips that I have had for 15+ years, best jags ever made.

Break barrels are easy to clean just cock it put the safety on and clean the barrel or disconnect the cocking linkage break the barrel open and clean the barrel, put a piece of tape over the air port hole to keep stuff out of the chamber.. You can put a towel on a table to protect the table and gun and let the barrel hang over the side and clean it, put a bowl or whatever to catch any drips. you can secure the barrel to a table leg if you want just for safety. Use a nylon brush dipped in whatever solvent and run it 5-6 times up and down the barrel. Push a few clean patches through to clean what the brush broke loose, a few wet, a few clean until the patches look fairly clean, use a wet brush again if you need to. Then rub some JB bore paste into a patch, good and covered but not oozing either. Put the patch on a jag/nylon brush poke it in and start "scrubbing" it back and forth in short strokes (3"-4" strokes) and work your way to the muzzle, I do this 3-4 times or a few more. Or push it slowly towards the muzzle and when the drag lessens on the patch it's starting to poke out into the muzzle brake so pull it back until it pulls out the breach about a inch and push it back to the muzzle again, push and pull it back and forth again 6-10 times. Push a few dry patches, a few solvent patches a few more to dry until clean and the barrel should be good other than normal cleaning when needed. JB bore paste is made from plant pulp, using it by hand won't harm a barrel, tooth paste is more aggressive, short of using power tools with it and trying to damage your barrel it's safe.