Always keep it clean. Shoot it, clean it.
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Always keep it clean. Shoot it, clean it.
hello all..... new here and had to just say that the CZ 75B or CZ 75 or dimonds in the ruff!!!! when i ordered mine from my local gun shop and yes it was a special order..he looked at me and said nobody in my area really knows of this gun???????? he also said i must have did alot of research on 9mm's and yes i did alot and anyone who does not feel the CZ is the best gun out there has never shot one and if you did and didn't LOVE it you had a clone! as i said best gun around for me to each there own.. but i would say to anyone here who has one good job boys you know your guns,,,,, oh oh lol yes clean your gun always
I believe there is no need to clean the gun other than personal reasons and do so when I feel like it. I don't worry about malfunctions as I do not keep the gun for anything other than the range. Mine has never malfunctioned.
If I were going to use it for Self Defense, I probably would clean it every couple/few range trips, unless I were to shoot hundreds and hundreds each session. After a normal range session, (mine's a 75B in .40) I might put a bit of oil on the barrel when the slide is retracted, maybe a drop on the rails, etc. I always use a BoreSnake for the bore on my guns. That's it.
When I do a full cleaning I field strip and thereafter use grease on the sliding parts, a drop of oil elsewhere.
I believe that you can clean a gun too much. Some 'experts' believe this to be true. If it ain't broke, don't fix it type of philosophy, and there may be some empirical basis for the 'cleaning too much' harms the gun or shortens its usable life argument. I don't know, and don't worry about it much.
I guess that I'm not 'OCD' about my firearms... I wonder what the general view of competition shooters is when it comes to cleaning and their firearms. I'd follow their consensus if used for SD and you shoot it a lot.
It's most because of the way the military trains, but before intentionally going to fire my firearms (ie range time) we do pre-fire checks (maintenance) on all the firearms. This is usually a basic function check and a light lubing of the firearm. After firing, whether it was one shot or several thousand (the machine guns do sometimes see this much at once) we do a detailed dis-assembly and cleaning.
I use this same practice at home, with minor variations (different tools and cleaning supplies). You can't go wrong making sure your firearm is up and running, properly.
when not intentionally firing the firearm, but the firearm is still in use (ie carried) we do a cleaning once weekly/bi-weekly or anytime exposed to adverse conditions (sand storms, rain, salt water ect). In storage, firearms are cleaned every 30-60 days.
While I do agree there is such a thing as "too much cleaning" this isn't in relation to how often you clean, but rather how deeply and long you clean. example, the white glove test will ALWAYS fail on (generally) any "black" (parkerized, bruniton, ect) firearm with certain cleaning solvents because they will lift carbon out of the pores of the metal and remove some of the coating every time. the only way to pass a white glove test, then, is to rid the weapon of nearly all lubrication. Not cool, obviously.
Funny how many opinons there are on this subject. It also is interesting to see what people use to tell who their opinion came to pass. The internet is a place were many folks gather! I clean my guns as I said often. I do probably fiire it more times then the average Joe. It gets dirty. It gets less dirty now that I am running Vit powder. My reason, I like to clean my guns!
RCG
i actually carry mine more than i shoot, and i open carry in a slide holster so my gun is exposed to more dirt and grime than powder and lead. it gets the daily wipe down and weekly lube (full cleaning when i do go to the range)
my dad taught me to clean it after firing it.... the military taught me to clean it every time i had a spare minute..... dad and uncle sam stick in my head
I own a Cz75 Shadow and shoot an IDPA match every week, and I go the range 1-2 times a week, and I go through about 400-500 rounds a week, and I think it needs cleaning after that. Mainly I clean the extractor area and the barrel ramp and the barrel. Sometimes I can go two weeks just by using a boresnake and a brush on the extractor area. But once I have the barrel out it is easy enough to go ahead and wipe down the barrel and the inside of the slide and relube it.
Since moving to slipstream for lubrication, I find the gun stays a lot cleaner and I can probably start going two weeks between cleanings.
Obviously, this also depends on the ammo you are shooting...but most ammo I shoot is fairly clean: CCI Blazer, PMC Brass, Georgia Arms 147gr reloads, lawman 147 TMJ, USAammo.
If you just used a boresnake with a little oil on it and a pistol brush on the extractor area, and used high quality oil, I would think you could go at least 1000 rounds without cleaning.
CC
As often as you like.