I was thinking that myself. I think even most stainless steel brushes that would be used to clean a barrel couldn't scratch it. I'm trying to imagine a quality hardened russian ak barrel being scratched by a frilly stainless brush. Then I think of how 000 steel wool can't even remove bluing off of a gun. As far as the heat goes for tempering... automatic fire. I don't believe it's changing the temper of the steel unless you're doing those crazy torture tests that leave the barrel red hot and drooping. Can you generate that much heat with a brush? I don't know.what is the make up of a cleaning brush .. bronze / brass .. the metal that hold it all in one piece .. basic steel ..
bet not harder then the barrel it self ..
That guy has an interesting take on what actually causes a barrel to be shot out. He says that he's seen barrels with the first 5 inches of barrel (chamber end) missing it's rifling still shoot sub moa. I've thought about scenarios like that and why bullet jump would make any difference. I know the pressures are different when jumping or already being close to the grooves. But why would it effect the accuracy? To me I always thought that once it engages the rifling (and if there is enough of it to stabilize the bullet) the bullet would still fly straight. Maybe @meketrefe could shed more light on that.
I think a bronze brush will ruin a prefectly good lead barrel!!!
youtubers come up with the most ridicolous shit. ...maybe this video is good entertainment for the loons.
lead barrel type .. wheel weights or pure lead .. lol
Probably more about the consistency of the wear than it's mere existence.That guy has an interesting take on what actually causes a barrel to be shot out. He says that he's seen barrels with the first 5 inches of barrel (chamber end) missing it's rifling still shoot sub moa. I've thought about scenarios like that and why bullet jump would make any difference. I know the pressures are different when jumping or already being close to the grooves. But why would it effect the accuracy? To me I always thought that once it engages the rifling (and if there is enough of it to stabilize the bullet) the bullet would still fly straight. Maybe @meketrefe could shed more light on that.
Someone must be selling a new product. lol Mohs hardness scale has steel at 4-4.5 and brass at 3 and so is.......wait for it..........wait..........copper. So,.....that's that. lol
Even professional just means you get paid. It doesn't mean you know what you're doing.The United States Military prides itself on marksmanship and accurate Rifles. They have been using Bronze/Copper Brushes for over a century with no signs of changing. Seems to me that Cleaning Kits from Germany, Switzerland, or damn near anywhere else in the World are the same....they can't all be wrong.
Think about this: When you use copper dissolving cleaner with a Copper (copper alloy) what do you think happens to that Brush?
Again, any jackass can make a video and post himself on screwtube passing their own opinions as professional advise.