I don't claim to be the know all be all, but I've been in the NFA game for a while now and shared my suppressor baffle cleaning process on another forum I'm on and everyone was very curious how I got these results without scrubbing like a mad man.
This switchback probably had a minimum of 2500 rounds through it with no cleaning:
I disassemble and then toss the baffles and throw them into a jar of CLR that I have pre-heated in my ultrasonic cleaner at 80* celcius:
Then I run my ultrasonic cleaner at temp for 20 minutes with the jar submerged
After that I inspect baffles and hit any remaining carbon with a brass bore brush (generally 12ga as that the largest I've got) and they go back in for another 10 minute hot tub soak:
Then everything gets a fresh water bath, dried, and reassembled looking brand new. Other than the jar of CLR....yuck. Wear gloves when dealing with that stuff. It's so full of lead by the time it's done I don't want it anywhere near bare skin:
Hopefully this can save someone some serious time. When I was doing it the old fashioned way with traditional methods it took HOURS.
This switchback probably had a minimum of 2500 rounds through it with no cleaning:


I disassemble and then toss the baffles and throw them into a jar of CLR that I have pre-heated in my ultrasonic cleaner at 80* celcius:

Then I run my ultrasonic cleaner at temp for 20 minutes with the jar submerged

After that I inspect baffles and hit any remaining carbon with a brass bore brush (generally 12ga as that the largest I've got) and they go back in for another 10 minute hot tub soak:

Then everything gets a fresh water bath, dried, and reassembled looking brand new. Other than the jar of CLR....yuck. Wear gloves when dealing with that stuff. It's so full of lead by the time it's done I don't want it anywhere near bare skin:



Hopefully this can save someone some serious time. When I was doing it the old fashioned way with traditional methods it took HOURS.