My son brought his stainless ultrasound tub and Hornady gun parts cleaner to the house yesterday. He's been using this setup for a while to clean our S&W 669 he uses for testing his hand loads. he decided that cleaning a couple of my guns would be a workable Father's Day gift.
The SR9c and SR22 were the candidates of choice since they are my go-to range guns with several thousand rounds each downrange with only conventional cleaning. As a note, I usually clean my guns after each outing so cleanliness was only an issue in hard to reach spots like the striker channel on the SR9c.
I was a little uncomfortable dunking the slides in the water and solution mix, but watching the blackish gray residue float away from the parts was interesting at least. We let the parts sit in the sun for a while afterward and then gave them a good shot of nitro-solvent to displace any remaining liquid. After reassembly, everything seemed to cycle more smoothly and now the next range trip will tell more.
I'm not sold enough to make this my go-to cleaning method, but it does get the crud out. Does anyone else have experience with ultrasound cleaning?
The SR9c and SR22 were the candidates of choice since they are my go-to range guns with several thousand rounds each downrange with only conventional cleaning. As a note, I usually clean my guns after each outing so cleanliness was only an issue in hard to reach spots like the striker channel on the SR9c.
I was a little uncomfortable dunking the slides in the water and solution mix, but watching the blackish gray residue float away from the parts was interesting at least. We let the parts sit in the sun for a while afterward and then gave them a good shot of nitro-solvent to displace any remaining liquid. After reassembly, everything seemed to cycle more smoothly and now the next range trip will tell more.
I'm not sold enough to make this my go-to cleaning method, but it does get the crud out. Does anyone else have experience with ultrasound cleaning?