Ultrasonic cleaners
Moderator: carlson1
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1507
- Joined: Thu Feb 01, 2007 10:11 pm
- Location: North Texas
Ultrasonic cleaners
Has anyone used an ultrasonic cleaner for cleaning their firearms and or parts? I have used them in the past with great success on other types of parts. If you have used one for this application and have feedback I would love to hear it. Thanks.
Last edited by ScubaSigGuy on Sun Jul 08, 2007 11:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.
S.S.G.

"A champion doesn’t become a champion in the ring. He is merely recognized in the ring.The ‘becoming’ happens during his daily routine." Joe Louis
NRA MEMBER

"A champion doesn’t become a champion in the ring. He is merely recognized in the ring.The ‘becoming’ happens during his daily routine." Joe Louis
NRA MEMBER
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1919
- Joined: Sun Feb 19, 2006 11:42 pm
- Location: NE TX
I still have an ultra-sonic cleaner in the drawer of an old drafting table. I haven't cleaned drafting pins since doing touch up on a pre-autocad map in the mid 90's. Actually, the last time I used it was an attempt to clean up some parts of a couple of Abu Garcia reels and other reels, of which some of the parts were nylon gears. They cleaned up quite well. I would think gun parts, even older parts with old hardened laquer would be better off soaked in a solvent though. My u-s cleaner only holds a few ounces of liquid so it is not made for very large parts.
It's not gun control that we need, it's soul control!
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 729
- Joined: Mon Jan 16, 2006 8:14 pm
- Location: Somewhere between 200ft and 900ft (AGL)
- Contact:
Re: Ultrasonic cleaners
Actually, Top Gun has had one for a couple months. It works well for most customers' guns. For hard use guns however, there is still no substitute for the proper application of a "toothbrush and elbow grease." In either case, the cleaning process is considerably easier using the ultrasonic cleaner.ScubaSigGuy wrote:Hasaanyone used an ultrasonic cleaner for cleaning their firearms and or parts? I have used them in the past with great success on other types of parts. If you have used one for this application and have feedback I would love to hear it. Thanks.
When you take the time out of your day to beat someone, it has a much longer lasting effect on their demeanor than simply shooting or tazing them.
G. C. Montgomery, Jr.
G. C. Montgomery, Jr.
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1919
- Joined: Sun Feb 19, 2006 11:42 pm
- Location: NE TX
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1394
- Joined: Mon Aug 08, 2005 2:03 pm
- Location: Central TX, just west of Austin
Most sonic cleaners are pretty small, or pretty expensive.
A chemist friend of mine used to bring handguns in to work (
) and after removing the grips, dunk them in a BIG sonic bath he had in the lab.
He usually had a big jar he'd filled with some solvent cocktail (he used words like "azeotrope") and then set the jar in the water-filled sonic bath - the sound waves were conducted through the water, the glass, and into the solvent, and he was able to clean things up without gunking up the bath.
Worked well for removing gunky schmutz from the pistol's nooks and crannies, but had no effect on leading or copper fouling in the barrel.
As an aside, he had an old mechanical pocket watch he used to clean the same way every year or two, but he'd add a few drops of some type of instument oil to the bath. Once the solvent evaporated, the parts had a miniscule coat of oil, which he proclaimed was "just right" to keep the watch running.
A chemist friend of mine used to bring handguns in to work (

He usually had a big jar he'd filled with some solvent cocktail (he used words like "azeotrope") and then set the jar in the water-filled sonic bath - the sound waves were conducted through the water, the glass, and into the solvent, and he was able to clean things up without gunking up the bath.
Worked well for removing gunky schmutz from the pistol's nooks and crannies, but had no effect on leading or copper fouling in the barrel.
As an aside, he had an old mechanical pocket watch he used to clean the same way every year or two, but he'd add a few drops of some type of instument oil to the bath. Once the solvent evaporated, the parts had a miniscule coat of oil, which he proclaimed was "just right" to keep the watch running.
Original CHL: 2000: 56 day turnaround
1st renewal, 2004: 34 days
2nd renewal, 2008: 81 days
3rd renewal, 2013: 12 days
1st renewal, 2004: 34 days
2nd renewal, 2008: 81 days
3rd renewal, 2013: 12 days