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Full Stock Barrel Removal

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How often should you remove the barrel from a full stock rifle and clean separately? I don't like the idea of removing the pins on my Kentucky rifle with a punch too often. I've had the gun for about five years and removed the barrel for the first time last night for complete cleaning. Looked fine to me, just a little fouling built up around the nose cap.
 
How often should you remove the barrel from a full stock rifle and clean separately? I don't like the idea of removing the pins on my Kentucky rifle with a punch too often. I've had the gun for about five years and removed the barrel for the first time last night for complete cleaning. Looked fine to me, just a little fouling built up around the nose cap.
Sounds to me like you're taking the right approach.
 
Always have a thin coat of sealer in the barrel channel , and as long as the pin holes in the underlugs are slotted , I never take the barrel out unless had to replace a worn touch hole , or perhaps have to install a tang peep sight.
 
Yeah , if you removed the barrel once a year it'd be excessive . If you dropped it in the creek or got caught in a thunderstorm , sure but .... Any who ....lock out .... A finish nail with blunt tip and tap the pins out , slowly , carefully. The pins are supposed to go from lock side to S.P. side but I've seen some dumb stuff . ... tang screw out and holding barrel.in channel , tap heal of buttplate on the bench ...barrel breech pops out . I have to do this for each build 5000 f&%$ing times ! ( slight exaggeration for effect ) so its easily done when you get used to it but .... its entirely unnecessary unless something drastic has happened to the firearm or your just bored and curious . Just go slow and be careful , it'll be fine if you have to ....
 
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I am at never unless I feel the need to pull the breech plug for some reason. I pulled the plug on one of my rifles to cone the muzzle lately and rotate the barrel's breech on a pad. Another time I thought I dry balled and couldn't get the ball out or get my puller to screw into it, I pulled the plug to find an empty breech, I had to laugh at myself on that one, DUH.
 
Every time I clean it. Made a punch and don't see any problem with taking it out. I then clean it in a bucket of warm water and soap, pumping it in and out.
I clean the barrel like you do, and have had no problems.
Remove and replace the pins carefully, and it cleans up nicely.
Oil it and store it until next time.
 
I am also of the school where I remove my barrel each time. I have tried without and always seem to spill water between the barrel and stock and end up removing the barrel anyway. I guess it is just hard teaching an "old dog" new tricks.
If you have a good coat of finish on the wood in the barrel channel and RIG or similar on the underside of the barrel a little water spilled will not matter.
 
If you have a good coat of finish on the wood in the barrel channel and RIG or similar on the underside of the barrel a little water spilled will not matter.
I have both a good coat of finish and RIG on the barrel, I just feel more comfortable removing the barrel. I have been doing so for years without any adverse effect. And I probably can do it that way for another 20, and by then, either way really won't have mattered much to me.
 

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