Nickle Posted March 2 Posted March 2 Have any of you tried using canola oil for lube on you vintage black powder gun? In my area canola oil is cheap and plenty. It's basically main ingredient in cooking sprays. I normally like to leave hoppes9 (kerosene)in barrels just to have bit of rust protection. Plus it cleans . But petroleum oil if you shoot the gun with it in the barrel really makes the fouling worse. Black powder lubes are natural like tallow and bees wax. I'm just wondering if a patch of canola oil in the barrel would help with fouling? The cooking spray canola would be handy to spray around cylinder for lube and protection. My gun is original 1880 manufactured with nickle steel. I'm not if the nickle finish makes a difference or not. Yes I know you are supposed to wipe cylinder and barrel perfectly clean etc. I like to store guns with a bit of rust protection. Sometimes I just grab a gun in a hurry and shoot stuff. Hoppes9 doesn't cause any troubles and I've been doing it all my life Quote
Rip Snorter Posted March 2 Posted March 2 Used Crisco years ago - haven't shot the black in ages. Got rid of nearly all of the guns. 1 1 Quote
J-BAR #18287 Posted March 2 Posted March 2 PAM cooking spray is essentially canola oil, and it works dandy as a patch lube in my Hawken .58 rifle. For long term storage I swab the barrel with a light coat of conventional CLP, which is removed with dry patches before the next shot is fired the following season. 1 1 Quote
Chickasaw Bill SASS #70001 Posted March 3 Posted March 3 I use Bore Butter soaked patches a tube lasts a long time , also use it to protect the wood stock CB 2 2 Quote
Texas Joker Posted March 3 Posted March 3 50/50 olive oil and bees wax. Works for patches. Leater. And chapstick/windburn. 1 1 Quote
Nickle Posted March 3 Author Posted March 3 3 hours ago, Colorado Coffinmaker said: Mobil 1 Synthetic Motor Oil So synthetic works differently than conventional oil if you shoot black powder with the oil in the barrel? Quote
Nickle Posted March 3 Author Posted March 3 5 minutes ago, Texas Joker said: 50/50 olive oil and bees wax. Works for patches. Leater. And chapstick/windburn. Ever use olive oil without the bees wax for bore protection and lube if you fired a black powder round through it with the olive oil in the barrel? Quote
Warden Callaway Posted March 3 Posted March 3 4 hours ago, Colorado Coffinmaker said: Mobil 1 Synthetic Motor Oil 14 hours ago, Chickasaw Bill SASS #70001 said: I use Bore Butter soaked patches a tube lasts a long time , also use it to protect the wood stock CB Ditto 1 Quote
Eyesa Horg Posted March 3 Posted March 3 Lucas synthetic Gun Oil works well too. I use Eezox for barrel protection and wipe down, and it works excellent and is also a good cleaner. Available from Amazon. 1 Quote
Colorado Coffinmaker Posted March 3 Posted March 3 Nickle YES!! Synthetic Lubricants react much differently with Black Powder as opposed to Petroleum Oils. 2 Quote
Cowtown Scout, SASS #53540 L Posted March 3 Posted March 3 The main thing is not to use a petroleum based product. 1 Quote
Texas Joker Posted March 4 Posted March 4 7 hours ago, Subdeacon Joe said: Lard. Got to be careful of the salt content 2 Quote
Cemetery Posted March 4 Posted March 4 On 3/2/2025 at 11:26 AM, Nickle said: Have any of you tried using canola oil for lube on you vintage black powder gun? In my area canola oil is cheap and plenty. It's basically main ingredient in cooking sprays. I normally like to leave hoppes9 (kerosene)in barrels just to have bit of rust protection. Plus it cleans . But petroleum oil if you shoot the gun with it in the barrel really makes the fouling worse. Black powder lubes are natural like tallow and bees wax. I'm just wondering if a patch of canola oil in the barrel would help with fouling? The cooking spray canola would be handy to spray around cylinder for lube and protection. My gun is original 1880 manufactured with nickle steel. I'm not if the nickle finish makes a difference or not. Yes I know you are supposed to wipe cylinder and barrel perfectly clean etc. I like to store guns with a bit of rust protection. Sometimes I just grab a gun in a hurry and shoot stuff. Hoppes9 doesn't cause any troubles and I've been doing it all my life I used all kinds of stuff, cheap cooking oils (but using Olive Oil gave me a hankerin' for fresh tomatoes, mozzarella, and basil), fresh bacon fat, Crisco and beeswax. When I had original Winchester rifles, I used Ballistol in the barrel and lifter area, and white lithium grease on the toggles and such. With my cap and ball guns, I used either cooking oil lubed wads, or tallow/beeswax blend smeared across the cylinder face. For cleaning I use industrial cleaning wipes from Home Depot (also handy around the kitchen), afterwards I wiped the barrels out with Qmaxx Black Diamond, Gunzilla or Eezox. Same goes for rifle and shotgun. Guts of all my guns are lubed with white lithium grease. 2 Quote
Subdeacon Joe Posted March 4 Posted March 4 48 minutes ago, Texas Joker said: Got to be careful of the salt content There are several brands that don't have salt. 1 Quote
Rooster Ron Wayne Posted March 4 Posted March 4 I have gotten lazy in my old age . I just use Ballistal for everything now . Zero issues. Not the cheapest way out . But I know my investment is protected. Rooster 2 Quote
Nickle Posted March 5 Author Posted March 5 19 hours ago, Rooster Ron Wayne said: I have gotten lazy in my old age . I just use Ballistal for everything now . Zero issues. Not the cheapest way out . But I know my investment is protected. Rooster I never see balistal for sale retail in my part of Alberta. I know it because I see Hickok 45 and Mike Bellevue using it. Shipping would be to expensive because spray can and stupid regulations. Is all balistal the same? What makes it different than gun oil that would cause more black powder fouling? I guess it's synthetic and that makes it good? Example oil like 3 and 1 oil gels up over time so it's not a good gun oil. I know regular Lithium grease is the worse thing in the world for bullet lube and black powder. You would be better off shooting unlubed bullets! Quote
J-BAR #18287 Posted March 5 Posted March 5 21 minutes ago, Nickle said: I never see balistal for sale retail in my part of Alberta. I know it because I see Hickok 45 and Mike Bellevue using it. Shipping would be to expensive because spray can and stupid regulations. Is all balistal the same? What makes it different than gun oil that would cause more black powder fouling? I guess it's synthetic and that makes it good? Example oil like 3 and 1 oil gels up over time so it's not a good gun oil. I know regular Lithium grease is the worse thing in the world for bullet lube and black powder. You would be better off shooting unlubed bullets! A page from the Ballistol MSDS: Ballistol is primarily medical grade (food grade) mineral oil. If you can't get the real stuff, you might try edible mineral oil (drugstore) as a substitute. I haven't done this, but it seems reasonable. 1 Quote
Cowtown Scout, SASS #53540 L Posted March 5 Posted March 5 Ballistol also comes in a non spray can of liquid. I use that on rags for wiping and mix with water in a generic plastic spray bottle for use in cleaning. 3 Quote
Nickle Posted March 5 Author Posted March 5 I'm going to have to look into this. Mineral oil is everywhere here in different grades from the drugstore where my wife works to UFA agriculture store that sells different grades. For black powder lube or to use oil in your barrel there apparently is a big difference between synthetic and conventional oil. If I Google Mineral oil it just says it's comes from refining petroleum. Quote
J-BAR #18287 Posted March 5 Posted March 5 (edited) 7 minutes ago, Nickle said: I'm going to have to look into this. Mineral oil is everywhere here in different grades from the drugstore where my wife works to UFA agriculture store that sells different grades. For black powder lube or to use oil in your barrel there apparently is a big difference between synthetic and conventional oil. If I Google Mineral oil it just says it's comes from refining petroleum. One of the nice properties of Ballistol is being able to dissolve in water. I suspect the addition of those alcohols helps it mix with water. You might have to experiment with some additives to the mineral oil to get it to behave like Ballistol. Good luck! Edited March 5 by J-BAR #18287 1 Quote
ORNERY OAF Posted March 5 Posted March 5 I use butter flavored Frisco, smells good mixed with the holy! 2 Quote
DeaconKC Posted March 6 Posted March 6 3 hours ago, ORNERY OAF said: I use butter flavored Frisco, smells good mixed with the holy! Frisco with smoke! 3 Quote
Kid Rich Posted March 8 Posted March 8 On 3/5/2025 at 8:21 AM, Nickle said: I never see balistal for sale retail in my part of Alberta. I know it because I see Hickok 45 and Mike Bellevue using it. Shipping would be to expensive because spray can and stupid regulations. Is all balistal the same? What makes it different than gun oil that would cause more black powder fouling? I guess it's synthetic and that makes it good? Example oil like 3 and 1 oil gels up over time so it's not a good gun oil. I know regular Lithium grease is the worse thing in the world for bullet lube and black powder. You would be better off shooting unlubed bullets! I use black lithium grease mixed with beeswax for my BP lube in my 45/90 and 45/70 and have for years. Makes the best BP lube I have used. Red lithium grease in my cap and ball revolvers for lube, works great. kR 1 Quote
Nickle Posted March 9 Author Posted March 9 I was with a guy who was letting me try his cap and ball gun. We ran out of lard so we tried Lithium grease from a grease gun he had in his truck. We put the Lithium grease over the balls. What a disaster. We only fired 6 shots. Bore was plugged with fouling. Hard to clean it out. Quote
Rooster Ron Wayne Posted March 9 Posted March 9 (edited) Balestall or Lard and Beeswax for me ! Edited March 9 by Rooster Ron Wayne 1 Quote
Kid Rich Posted March 9 Posted March 9 11 hours ago, Nickle said: I was with a guy who was letting me try his cap and ball gun. We ran out of lard so we tried Lithium grease from a grease gun he had in his truck. We put the Lithium grease over the balls. What a disaster. We only fired 6 shots. Bore was plugged with fouling. Hard to clean it out. Some of the "lithium" is a blend of regular grease and lithium. kR 1 Quote
Nickle Posted March 9 Author Posted March 9 11 hours ago, Kid Rich said: Some of the "lithium" is a blend of regular grease and lithium. kR I googled and you are right. Can be either regular or synthetic oil. The regular oil based grease we used on that cap gun really plugged the barrel really bad really fast with fouling. 1 Quote
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