So, the more you clean it, the less to worry about? Not necessarily so. The striker pin channel? The firing pin safety? The depressor plunger spring? The extractor? Every time someone cleans a striker fired pistol, there is going to be, remnants of unseen residues from firing, mixed with whatever cleaner is being used and little by little, is seeping it's way and creeping into these various fundamental working parts of a striker fired pistol. However, Incorporate a CLP? Pistol owners who clean and spray and scrub their slides top and bottom with CLP every single range outing? For just a couple of hundred rounds? And then after they have wiped down dry, the outside of that slide from the CLP they sprayed to clean it? And then use more CLP to lube the barrel? Lugs? Rails? I wonder where all that CLP run off travels to? And when it does, the movement of the pin and striker spring can actually act as a self cleaning instrument to rid the channel of loose powder and residue AS, long as it's fairly dry. Ordinary dirt and fouling from gunpowder residues, have a hard time finding it's way into the striker channel on it's own. ![]() ![]() Most manufacturing manuals for striker fired pistols, specifically state to keep all type lubricants out of the channels.
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