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Not fond of Balistol, but I love the smell from a just fired shotgun shell. Reminds me of pheasant hunting with my father when I was a little kid, too young to carry a gun.

Dragged out of bed at 4am, meeting a couple of his friends at a little diner for breakfast. Frosty morning, waiting for the dog to flush a bird....

Magical memories.
Yes, now that you mention that,.. but we didn’t go to a diner… my cousins would arrive and we’d go out back and down our field for pheasant and then over to the ponds for ducks.. I was the retriever…
And I don’t mind the smell of ballistol.
 
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WD40 NEVER, EVER goes near my fire arms----PERIOD. Worst junk ever made but it will flush off water. Make sure to remove it before a real lube.
 
By now everyone knows WD-40 is not suitable for guns as it leaves a residue which builds up and over time jams things up. Long-time gunsmiths will tell you that shotguns in particular get sticky and jam because of use of the WD. One of the major gun magazines recently had a column on this, I think it was Shooting Times, stating that WD should be no where near guns. It displaces water; it's not a lube like Ballistol.
Whatev. My dad used it all his life. Works fine. Use what works for YOU and don’t listen to experten.
 
Ballistol is a great product I use it frequently. It is great for any piece that needs cleaning. It protects well also.
I was weaned on Hoppe’s #9 though. That smell takes me back. Lots of memories.
I have a quart of it right next to ballitol.
Can’t stop using my Hoppes #9. It still works.

And there should be a man’s cologne of Hoppe’s #9
Oh yes the smell of number nine takes me straight back to my grand Pappy's Workshop
 

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