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Cleaning a Long Ranger
- JEBar
- Town Marshal / Deputy Admin
- Posts: 19338
- Joined: Sun Mar 20, 2016 10:58 pm
- Location: central NC
Re: Cleaning a Long Ranger
over the last (almost) 50 years I've bounced back and forth between cleaning our BLR from muzzle to the chamber and from the chamber to the muzzle .... given the Long Ranger is basically patterned after the BLR, my guess is cleaning their barrels would be similar .... I've found that with the rifle upright and positioned parallel to the floor, if I remove the magazine and work the action so the bolt is all of the way back, I can run a cleaning rod from the muzzle toward the chamber .... any grit dislodged will end up in the chamber or drop out through magazine's opening .... then run a patch from the muzzle and it will push any grit out of the chamber .... in short, removing the magazine pretty well eliminates the issue of pushing grit into the rifles action
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Re: Cleaning a Long Ranger
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There is a cavity behind the chamber in the Long Ranger that the rotating bolt rotates into when closing the lever. Cleaning Muzzle to breach pushes whatever debris there may be in the bore and chamber into this cavity. Get too much debris in that cavity and the bolt may not rotate into ready-to-fire bolt lockup.
There is a cavity behind the chamber in the Long Ranger that the rotating bolt rotates into when closing the lever. Cleaning Muzzle to breach pushes whatever debris there may be in the bore and chamber into this cavity. Get too much debris in that cavity and the bolt may not rotate into ready-to-fire bolt lockup.
JEBar wrote: ↑Tue May 28, 2019 5:19 pmover the last (almost) 50 years I've bounced back and forth between cleaning our BLR from muzzle to the chamber and from the chamber to the muzzle .... given the Long Ranger is basically patterned after the BLR, my guess is cleaning their barrels would be similar .... I've found that with the rifle upright and positioned parallel to the floor, if I remove the magazine and work the action so the bolt is all of the way back, I can run a cleaning rod from the muzzle toward the chamber .... any grit dislodged will end up in the chamber or drop out through magazine's opening .... then run a patch from the muzzle and it will push any grit out of the chamber .... in short, removing the magazine pretty well eliminates the issue of pushing grit into the rifles action
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UPDATES: OR passes 114, "one of strictest gun control measures in U.S." https://henryrifleforums.com/viewtopic. ... 34#p213234
- JEBar
- Town Marshal / Deputy Admin
- Posts: 19338
- Joined: Sun Mar 20, 2016 10:58 pm
- Location: central NC
Re: Cleaning a Long Ranger
interesting .... I don't recall a cavity like that in our BLR .... ours has grooves that the rotary part of the bolt locks into .... much like a bolt action rifle .... we've had it since the early 70's and its action is still very smooth
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Re: Cleaning a Long Ranger
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Maybe a picture will help with visualization. This picture is taken looking into the magazine receiver toward the chamber (chamber not visible). The rotating bolt is in the foreground. The area between the two yellow lines is the roof of the cavity that the LR bolt slips into and rotates in once it clears the fixed locking cogs (teeth) immediately behind the cavity.
Maybe a picture will help with visualization. This picture is taken looking into the magazine receiver toward the chamber (chamber not visible). The rotating bolt is in the foreground. The area between the two yellow lines is the roof of the cavity that the LR bolt slips into and rotates in once it clears the fixed locking cogs (teeth) immediately behind the cavity.
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UPDATES: OR passes 114, "one of strictest gun control measures in U.S." https://henryrifleforums.com/viewtopic. ... 34#p213234
- JEBar
- Town Marshal / Deputy Admin
- Posts: 19338
- Joined: Sun Mar 20, 2016 10:58 pm
- Location: central NC
Re: Cleaning a Long Ranger
that's for the picture, I now understand .... it appears that the good news is, if any residue from cleaning was to get in there, it would be easy to see and remove ....
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Re: Cleaning a Long Ranger
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Not too bad, but it is a little bit of a fishing expedition since one can't see the the bottom of the cavity when trying to make sure it's cleaned out.
Not too bad, but it is a little bit of a fishing expedition since one can't see the the bottom of the cavity when trying to make sure it's cleaned out.
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UPDATES: OR passes 114, "one of strictest gun control measures in U.S." https://henryrifleforums.com/viewtopic. ... 34#p213234
Re: Cleaning a Long Ranger
Clearly amazed how many of you would risk using a cleaning rod from muzzle to breech.
Not only would you push powder, brass and other debris into the rifles chamber and action, but you risk damaging the rifles crown.
Not only would you push powder, brass and other debris into the rifles chamber and action, but you risk damaging the rifles crown.
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Old age and treachery beats young and stupid very time!
- Ojaileveraction
- Cowboy
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- Joined: Tue Apr 04, 2017 11:49 pm
- JEBar
- Town Marshal / Deputy Admin
- Posts: 19338
- Joined: Sun Mar 20, 2016 10:58 pm
- Location: central NC
Re: Cleaning a Long Ranger
in cleaning firearms, the saying one size doesn't fit all usually applies ..... the receivers of all lever action rifles a not built the same ..... for some, cleaning from the muzzle may work well and for others, may not be a good thing to do .... for applications where one wishes to clean from the muzzle cheap muzzle guards are available ===> https://www.amazon.com/Pro-Shot-Fits-Ca ... AYC87KM2QB ....
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- Ojaileveraction
- Cowboy
- Posts: 1292
- Joined: Tue Apr 04, 2017 11:49 pm
Re: Cleaning a Long Ranger
I have never understood how a brass, aluminium, coated or carbon fiber cleaning rod could do any damage to a hardened steel barrel.
I believe this is a left over from the olden days off steel rods.
I believe this is a left over from the olden days off steel rods.
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Pax at Justitia