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Steel wool is much less abrasive than Skotchbrite or any other similar plastic product. Like Asst says, just compare the results on the same piece, you'll see. FWIW I recommend the 00 grade, anything finer doesn't seem to give the same bite into the lead. I haven't tried bronze wool but would be very surprised if it worked nearly as well as 00 steel wool. And yes, repeated use will damage an older soft barrel, but IMO once or twice would be OK if used sparingly. I prefer the Outer's FoulOut reverse electroplating system, it will remove lead as well as copper when the proper materials are used and it seems to work very well indeed. One caveat however; if left to work for too long a time, it WILL remove barrel steel! The system should be turned off when the lights say the barrel is clean, DO NOT let it work all night! The amount of steel removed will be miniscule, but we can't afford any loss at all in some of these old barrels, so please pay attention to the lights. In the past I've gotten flames for cautioning about the FoulOut and its potential for steel removal. It seems some folks don't believe that the removal can happen, and the Outer's literature doesn't say much about it. Back when the FoulOut first came out, my shooting buddy and I bought one to share. Well, my shooting buddy is A Big Kahuna in the Instrumentation & Control section down at the local nuclear plant, and he immediately began researching the FoulOut system 'cause he's pretty anal about such things. To make a long story short, the factory engineers eventually confirmed that an extended session in a clean barrel would result in some slight steel removal, at least it would when the copper-removing system was in use. My buddy didn't ask specifically about the lead-removal side, but I personally take no chances. The engineers stressed that no steel removal would take place unless the system was operated on clean steel for many, many hours; they mentioned 4 hours or more. I typically set my buzzer/dinger alarm for one hour at a time if I'm not going to be within view of the lights, and I've noticed no problems in many, many years of use. The one-hour setting allows for only a few minutes of bare-steel exposure time before I'm alerted, and has worked very well for me for a long time now. I recommend it. I also recommend Ed's Red, it's cheap and does an excellent job on light fouling/leading. I don't use stainless brushes on any barrel that I value, and I don't even use bronze brushes if I can help it. Please see Merrill Martin's articles in Precision Shooting a few years ago, he gave some interesting results from his cleaning experiments re brushes vs patches. Sorry to be so long-winded, JMOFWIW, Joe
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