If you treat your baffles with dip and when your done you go ahead with a brush or small screwdriver and scrape the rest it falls right off. I rinse my baffles real good and then I go over them with a brush and almost all of the lead and carbon falls right off leaving a nearly completely clean set of baffles. What doesn’t get completely eaten by the acid is usually softened up by the dip to where it will just fall right off.
I have a Silencerco sparrow. It’s a monoxide supressor but there is an O-Ring in the end. Will it damage the o-ring or is there no reaction with that type of material?
BTW they clean hospitals, water treatment waste, morgues, drinking water bottles, fruit and even meat and poultry with peracetic acid. Good stuff but doesn’t last long.
@@ianconkey9825 once you put 16k or so rounds through it it gets pretty clogged up. That myth is pretty well busted, however the average shooter won’t ever need to. My turbos blast baffle had only the main bore hole and half of a couple others clear. Roughly 7000tula shit .223 and the rest was reman. I’ve seen pictures of range cans blown apart from baffle strikes due to carbon build up but that was at like 70k rounds lol
Do on use on titanium. Most cans seem to use Grade 9 titanium, which is an alloy that includes aluminum, which reacts badly with peracetic acid. I wouldn't risk it.