by jshuberg on Mon Nov 18, 2013 8:46 pm
Almost all solvents will eat a bronze (brass?) cleaning brush. The better the solvent at removing copper, the harder it will be on a bronze brush. For most routine cleanings though, use of a nylon brush is good enough to get the job done. It won't get all of the fouling out of the barrel, but you don't need to get all the fouling out of the barrel. You only need to remove enough fouling to prevent excess buildup from getting to the point of causing malfunctions. Depending on how much use your pistol gets, doing a deep clean with a bronze brush can done every couple months or less.
That being said, there are two ways that a bronze brush wears out. By either a large number of bristles falling out, or the ends of the brush being worn down by friction inside the barrel making the brush no longer a tight fit.
There is nothing you can do to prevent the bristles from wearing down short of making sure the barrel is wet with solvent when brushed. Bristles falling out however are largely because solvent left on them has weakened and thinned the bristles, making them more prone to falling out. One several bristles fall out the overall brush becomes looser at the center, and even more will start to fall out. At some point every time you run the brush through the barrel you'll lose several more bristles. When this happens, the brush is done.
I've found that the best way to minimize this from happening is to swirl the brush while still on the rod in rubbing alcohol for a good 10-15 seconds, and then blow it off with compressed air to dry. Cleaning the brushes this way seems to more than double their usable life, and most of the time the ends get wore down before they start shedding bristles all over the place. YMMV.
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