Ridiculous. I edc one of these and the recoil isn't much more than .357 sig. Also, what a wasteful and likely expensive way to clean a gun. Takes me 5 minutes with a paper towel, some oil, and a stick. I wouldn't be surprised if the chemicals started dissolving the grip eventually. Carcinogenic? More cans in the dump... Please take this as constructive criticism to do better.
We value any constructive criticism. So, one step at a time: 1. The feeling of recoil is subjective. But comparing maximum power values- 357 sig is 1000 J, 454 Casull is 2500J. With the same barrel length, recoil the same? I don't think so. 2 You use a paper towel, oil and a stick. Ok, how do you remove lead and copper from the barrel? With oil? How do you clean the old dirt- a stick is not enough, you have to use a brush (if you use oil). How do you protect the gun from corrosion- pour oil? And then what does your shirt or trousers look like - all covered in greasy stains? 3. Our products are safe for all gun parts - that's why museums use them. Nothing gets damaged. Nor are they carcinogenic. Thank you for your comments but we have a different opinion. Of course, it is up to the owner of the weapon to decide how to clean it. Greetings.
Ridiculous. I edc one of these and the recoil isn't much more than .357 sig. Also, what a wasteful and likely expensive way to clean a gun. Takes me 5 minutes with a paper towel, some oil, and a stick. I wouldn't be surprised if the chemicals started dissolving the grip eventually. Carcinogenic? More cans in the dump... Please take this as constructive criticism to do better.
We value any constructive criticism.
So, one step at a time:
1. The feeling of recoil is subjective. But comparing maximum power values- 357 sig is 1000 J, 454 Casull is 2500J. With the same barrel length, recoil the same? I don't think so.
2 You use a paper towel, oil and a stick. Ok, how do you remove lead and copper from the barrel? With oil? How do you clean the old dirt- a stick is not enough, you have to use a brush (if you use oil). How do you protect the gun from corrosion- pour oil? And then what does your shirt or trousers look like - all covered in greasy stains?
3. Our products are safe for all gun parts - that's why museums use them. Nothing gets damaged. Nor are they carcinogenic.
Thank you for your comments but we have a different opinion. Of course, it is up to the owner of the weapon to decide how to clean it.
Greetings.