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The Evolution Of The Journey To Clean Steel

The Evolution Of The Journey To Clean Steel

Last Saturday, Dan Bukros, a sponsored shooter for Kelbly's, called with exciting news. He'd just broken in a PRS rifle with roughly two hundred rounds—the standard for serious competitors before their first match—and discovered something remarkable. Using ThorroClean with a bronze brush, just twenty strokes brought his barrel down to clean steel. He was genuinely thrilled by how quickly and thoroughly it worked.

That efficiency matters more than you'd think. Consider another story from a few years back. A fellow I know had a rifle listed on Gunbroker for sixty days without a single inquiry. Discouraged, he decided to clean the bore with ThorroClean, took a bore scope photo showing that shiny steel, and posted it in his ad. That same night he got a call. He sold the rifle that night.

The contrast here matters. Richard Franklin, a premier long range rifle builder in Virginia, built rifles that were genuine art—rifles that set records and turned heads. When someone would bring a rifle to him needing a barrel, he'd examine it first. Sometimes he'd say, you don't need a new barrel yet. He'd put it in a vise and commit to a daily regimen: fifty to a hundred strokes with whatever bore cleaning products were available back then. Two weeks of that work might finally bring a barrel back to bare steel and restore its accuracy.

That was the standard. Every single day. For weeks.

Today it's different. ThorroClean changes the equation entirely. Twenty strokes instead of fifty or a hundred. One cleaning session instead of fourteen days of patience. Minimal mess, minimal time, maximum results—bringing a barrel down to shiny steel and restoring performance.

It's the difference between old craft and modern chemistry working together. The precision mindset Richard Franklin embodied hasn't changed. Serious shooters still demand clean barrels. But the tools have evolved to match the commitment.

May 18th 2026 Les Voth

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