I've tried to use a PatchWorn, but I never could find a drinking straw small enough to use to feed the PatchWorm into the .22's barrel - and the green weed eater type cord would not work, something always blocked it up inside the baffles. I tried to insert just a .22 cleaning rod and something always blocked its entry and I sure wasn't going to force it. Then I wondered, could a one-piece carbon fiber .177 cleaning rod make it all the way to the bolt. So I grabbed one and it worked. Then, I had another problem - how to attach a cloth patch to the end of the rod - that little .177 patch holder is SMALL and couldn't get a patch into it.
Then, it hit me. Use that little .177 patch holder to trap a loop of tiny string in the threaded end of the .177 rod and then use the rod like I'd planned to use the PatchWorm and pull a cloth cleaning patch up, out of the barrel. And it worked like a charm.
The following pic is of the string trapped inside the end of the cleaning rod. I just inserted the two ends of the loop of string into the rod and then trapped them inside by screwing in the patch holder. I had to cut most of the patch holder off so that the string would emerge and I could fish it out. To fish it out, I used a dental pick. I've used it several times now and the string has stayed put.
The last pic is of the cleaning rod sticking out into the breach so that I could fish out the thread.
I can use this method on both my .22 and .25 PCP's (and my non-break barrel springers, too - my Air Arms TX200, Diana 460 Mag and Diana Mod 48). Now, I have to figure out a way to clean my new .177 m-rod - I'm still awaiting its arrival, so I don't really know that this method won't work. On YouTube I saw someone use a shop vac to draw a long loop of thread up and out of their barrel - then they inserted a cloth patch and pulled it up.. I guess I'll give that a shot.
Then, it hit me. Use that little .177 patch holder to trap a loop of tiny string in the threaded end of the .177 rod and then use the rod like I'd planned to use the PatchWorm and pull a cloth cleaning patch up, out of the barrel. And it worked like a charm.
The following pic is of the string trapped inside the end of the cleaning rod. I just inserted the two ends of the loop of string into the rod and then trapped them inside by screwing in the patch holder. I had to cut most of the patch holder off so that the string would emerge and I could fish it out. To fish it out, I used a dental pick. I've used it several times now and the string has stayed put.
The last pic is of the cleaning rod sticking out into the breach so that I could fish out the thread.
I can use this method on both my .22 and .25 PCP's (and my non-break barrel springers, too - my Air Arms TX200, Diana 460 Mag and Diana Mod 48). Now, I have to figure out a way to clean my new .177 m-rod - I'm still awaiting its arrival, so I don't really know that this method won't work. On YouTube I saw someone use a shop vac to draw a long loop of thread up and out of their barrel - then they inserted a cloth patch and pulled it up.. I guess I'll give that a shot.