Reddit Reddit reviews Hoppe's No. 9 Gun Cleaning Patch, .38-.45 Caliber/.410-20-Guage (500 Pack)

We found 4 Reddit comments about Hoppe's No. 9 Gun Cleaning Patch, .38-.45 Caliber/.410-20-Guage (500 Pack). Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Sports & Outdoors
Hunting & Fishing
Gun Maintenance
Gun Cleaning Kits
Sports & Fitness
Shooting
Gun Accessories, Maintenance & Storage
Hoppe's No. 9 Gun Cleaning Patch, .38-.45 Caliber/.410-20-Guage (500 Pack)
Hunting gun cleaning suppliesMade of the highest quality materialsAnother great Hoppe's productHoppe's No. 9 cleaning patches are ultra-absorbent and uniformly wovenThese cleaning patches come pre-cutIncludes 500 cleaning patchesDesigned for use with .38-.45 caliber/.410-20-guage
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4 Reddit comments about Hoppe's No. 9 Gun Cleaning Patch, .38-.45 Caliber/.410-20-Guage (500 Pack):

u/hulkzillaman · 22 pointsr/guns

First off familiarize yourself with the four rules of firearm safety

>Treat all guns as if they are loaded.

>Never let the muzzle cover anything you are not willing to destroy.

>Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on the target.

>Be sure of your target and what is beyond it.

sounds like a safe is out of the question, if so you can pick these up a couple of gunvault breech lock kits or these.

second you can pick up a universal gun cleaning kit, hoppes no. 9 cleaning solvent, and cleaning patches online or at your local Walmart.

u/That_Squidward_feel · 1 pointr/Firearms

>so does anyone have any advice for storage

Dry (low air humidity) would be ideal. Desiccant pads for your safe would be ideal (personally I use those silica bags you can toss into the microwave to recharge once they're saturated). While Glocks aren't particularly vulnerable to that, it's a steel item still, water and oxygen will make it rust sooner or later.

Depending on your state laws (I'm not American so this is second hand hearsay at best), you might also need to follow some "safe storage" laws. You already mention a safe, so you should be gucci.

>maintenance

Get yourself some decent gun oil (Break Free CLP seems to be popular) and a 9mm/.38/.357 cleaning kit if you haven't already. The basic variant is more than enough. And some patches.

There's no need to drench it in oil, just follow the Glock lubrication guidelines (it's outlined somewhere in the manual). Personally I just clean the gun, use a second patch to lube the inside of the barrel and then wipe everything else down with that patch (surface of the barrel, inside+outside of the slide, recoil spring).

Here's a video for you.

>modding

Technically yes, but honestly if this is your first firearm I'd focus on getting the hang of it first.

The four most popular "mods" are

  • replacement sights (Ameriglo seems popular, but you seem to have that one covered already)

  • triggers (APEX and a few others)

  • lights (the go-to seems to be the Surefire X300 or Streamlight TLR-1 HL - personally I have one of those TLRs too)

  • and reddot optics (either via MOS slide or by getting your slide milled - the go-to is the Trijicon RMR type 2, personally I have one with a Leupold Deltapoint Pro).

    >I don't even know where the safety is

    Glocks have internal safeties.

    >or how to disassemble it

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FN9a-4pp6dQ

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7gKnVbGg5BM

    ----

    >I don't know that much about guns besides what video games and playing airsoft as a kid taught me.

    Your best bet is a beginner handgun course (your local gun shop, gun rights group or the internet should yield the desired results - make sure the instructor is actually certified, not some snake oil salesman).

    A couple resources to get you started - ESPECIALLY the 4 safety rules:

    4 universal safety rules by ret. Army Ranger John Lovell

    NRA-certified handgun training course by Robert L. Weijland, US Firearms Training Association

    Pistol grip demonstration by Shannon Smith, Palm Beach Shooting Center

    There's more of that stuff on Youtube - ideally you watch a couple of those videos before you head into that course, that way you've heard most of the terminology etc. already, which helps a lot with not getting confused/overwhelmed/losing track.