Ballistol

Ballistol works magically around rust or other contaminants. Placed 6 or 8 drops on these locked-up cheap chinese pliers and a couple days later they work better than new. The rust is visible weeping outta the joints 3 days later. Treated a stubborn trailer lock with it, works slick as whistle now. Gave a can to a mechanic friend that keeps it hidden. Says he doesn't want the shop monkeys wasting it.

Oh yeah...... works good on guns and smells great too:cool:
So then . . . how come the can is rusty??
 
I really like the way it works. Call me a fan, I guess.
Most days I don't mind the odor. But, there are days it bothers me.
Now, as for the wife, she is quite consistent. It bothers her every time I open the can..... even if I am in the basement on the far end of the house. I tend to use it when she is out and about and expected to be so for several hours.
 
Ballistol and Black Powder go together like ham and eggs. Petroleum by products do not work well with Black Powder.
Ballistol is water soluble, it mixes with water to make "Moose Milk" which can then be used sparingly to lubricate a patch for a round ball. Ballistol is a by product of coal oil, or mineral oil. Germans figured this stuff out by necessity. I got into using it when I got into HK firearms and have been using it ever since. It works on metal, leather, wood. If you use it on old dried out leather holsters the brass fittings will never turn green (verdigris) One of my shooting buddies despises the smell, he says it smells like old gym socks, it doesn't bother me at all.
 
Well after reading about the many uses of Ballistol, I decided to add to my growing collection of gun cleaner/solvents and ordered a can (despite the smell). :D

Every time you spray Ballistol, it's like a good friend with poor hygiene just walked into your gun cleaning area.

So after posting ^^^above I've now used Ballistol, as gun solvent, leather cleaner/restorer and on wood tables in the "man cave". Gotta admit it seems to be great on the leather and wood tables, OK as a gun solvent, but I need to compare with some of the other solvents before final judgement.

The smell.......(see rockquarry's comment above) well, the wife came into the "man cave" an hour or so after I had used it on the leather chair and couch, and wood tables. She wrinkled her nose and asked what was that horrible smell. Think I may have found another use for the Ballistol .... guaranteed privacy from inquisitive wives. :D

Don
 
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Been using Ballistol on my leather work boots , (outdoors) spray them down, wipe off and let dry a day or two. Makes them real soft and make sure to sit them up so dog can't carry one off to chew on
 

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