How to Clean Your Rimfire Rifle Barrel the ELEY Way
The experts at ELEY Limited, top rimfire ammo-maker, have posted a helpful guide to cleaning rimfire barrels. We reprint highlights of the article below, but we suggest you read the full article on the Eley website: How to Clean Your Rifle the ELEY Way.
Editor’s Comment: This is not the only way to clean a rimfire barrel. There are other procedures. This is the method recommended by ELEY based on decades of experience with the top smallbore shooters in the world, including many Olympic Gold Medalists. Some shooters have been very successful cleaning less frequently, or using different types of solvents. The ELEY method is a good starting point.
Rimfire Barrel Cleaning
1. Clean the extension tube with a 12 gauge brush and felt or tissue moistened with solvent.
2. Smoothly insert a cleaning rod guide into the receiver.
3. Apply a dry felt to the cleaning rod adapter and push it through the barrel to the muzzle in one slow steady movement. As the felt is dry it may feel stiff.
4. Remove the soiled felt and pull back the cleaning rod.
5. Apply a new felt to the cleaning rod adapter and moisten it with Rimfire Blend / cleaning oil.
6. Insert the moistened felt into the barrel and push it to the muzzle with short forward movements.
7. Remove the soiled felt and pull back the cleaning rod through the barrel.
8. Clean the rod with tissue to avoid getting solvent on your hands.
9. Repeat steps 6, 7 and 8, until the felts are no longer dirty or soiled.
10. After steps 1-9, Eley recommends running an oiled felt down the bore. Before the next use of your rifle use a cleaning rod to push a clean dry felt through the barrel to the muzzle in one steady movement. Repeat this until there are no signs of oil on the felt.
Clean More Thoroughly After 200-300 Rounds
IMPORTANT: Eley stresses that the procedure outlined above is a basic cleaning procedure. After a few hundred rounds, Eley recommends brushing the barrel to remove lead deposits:“Intensive cleaning of your rifle will be needed after every 200–300 rounds. The barrel should be cleaned with a bronze brush. In order to do this you will need to push the brush in the direction of the muzzle and repeat three times. A bronze brush is used as it is the only tool that can be used to completely remove lead remnants.”
The above procedure is reprinted courtesy ELEY. All content © 2015 ELEY Limited. All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without written permission.
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Tags: Barrel Cleaning, Rimfire, Smallbore, Tenex
I rarely ever clean rimfire barrels. I have 1890 Winchesters with what appear to be new barrels on the inside but are obviously 100+ years old on the outside. Most of my half dozen 10/22’s with TacSol barrels have never been cleaned. The only time I’ve ever really been forced to clean a .22 barrel was after shooting that nasty Winchester lead free tin based ammo. To each his own.
I clean my rimfire barrel once a year at end of each season and see no difference in accuracy either way.
Odd that Eley now offers a rimfire cleaning procedure. Years ago, when discussing their in house testing of their ammo, they were asked what they tested their ammo in and their response was an Anschutz model 54 barreled action and also how often they cleaned the barrel. Their response at that time was never. CJ