Breakthrough Clean Technologies® Suppressor Cleaning Kit, 16oz.
$57.95
Price: $57.95
(as of Nov 19, 2024 16:24:12 UTC – Details)
Great Product
ALL-IN-ONE SUPPRESSOR CLEANING KIT: Provides effortless suppressor cleaning process with a comprehensive kit that includes everything you need for thorough maintenance—Pack includes (1) 16oz. Suppressor Cleaner, (1) Soaking Tube, (2) Specialized Brushes, (1) Retrieval Tool, & (1) Organized Tool Tray.
HIGH-PERFORMANCE SUPPRESSOR CLEANER: Provided in the kit is a 16 oz bottle of Breakthrough Clean Technologies Suppressor Cleaner, known for its exceptional cleaning power.
COMPATABILITY: Fits suppressors up to 2.375” in diameter and 8.5” in length.
SOAKING TUBE INCLUDED: A Soaking Tube ensures optimal cleaning by allowing the suppressor components to be fully immersed for deep and thorough cleansing.
SPECIALIZED BRUSHES: Two precision-engineered brushes are included to effectively remove carbon buildup, ensuring your suppressor operates in fullest potential.
RETRIEVAL TOOL: This kit provides a specialized retrieval tool to extract cleaning patches & components safely & easily from the suppressor.
ORGANIZED CLEANING TRAY: Keep all your cleaning tools in one place with the included organized tray, making maintenance sessions convenient & hassle-free.
DURABLE & RELIABLE: Each component of the kit is constructed with high-quality materials, ensuring longevity & consistent performance in maintaining your suppressor.
ENHANCED SUPPRESSOR PERFORMANCE: Regular use of this kit helps ensure your suppressor functions optimally, prolonging its lifespan and preserving its effectiveness in the field.
Customers say
Customers like the functionality, ease of cleaning, and value for money of the product. They mention it works well on stainless steel rim fire baffles, monocore systems, and muzzle brakes.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
7 reviews for Breakthrough Clean Technologies® Suppressor Cleaning Kit, 16oz.
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Cheryl M. Young –
No ultrasonic machine needed
This stuff is the best product I’ve used for getting suppressors clean. Before I had to use an ultrasonic cleaner which is noisy and can be messy. This stuff cuts through all the carbon build up even faster. I just drop my titanium baffles into the solution and the next morning they are ready to be clean up with a rag. All the carbon just wipes right off. Expensive but very effective product which I have been re-using multiple times and it’s still going strong.
2manytoyz –
BUY IT! Do yourself a favor and read this review.
This works amazing. I had parts that I’ve never been trying to clean for 4+ years with heavy carbon buildup. I’ve used about everything I could think of. Even bought some automative carbon cleaner that ruined the finish and did clean some carbon. I soaked the parts in this and it instantly the cleaner turned black. After a few hours I pulled it out and wiped off almost all the carbon. For best results I soak in this a few hours. Then toss the parts in a rock tumbler with stainless steel media. Bam, zero scrubbing. Keep in mind the tumbler will trash the finish but zero scrubbing. Amazon sells the Rebel Tumbler and stainless media as a kit. There is a whole write up about that which you can do a search for on the net. Lets face it. No one wants to spend hours scrubbing or dealing with harmful stinky chemicals. I can’t speak to how it will do on heavy lead build up but light lead built up is no issue.
Skyhitoy –
Awesome product
Works great
Troy Elder –
Works decently.
For the price and the hype I had greater expectations. I had a 36 cal Optimus gen1 I hadnât cleaned in some time. Iâd put about 400-500 rds of 22lr via CZ457 and 200-300 rds of 9mm via CZ Scorpion Evo 3+. The baffles were extremely carbon locked without using a baffle pusher they werenât coming out. I soaked the whole suppressor repeatedly in the jar for 48 hrs while submerged part of that time while submerged in an ultrasonic with heat. Solution didnât break the baffles free and the pictures show what was left behind after using a baffle pusher to get them out. Quite a bit left to clean. It does do a sufficient job on exposed surfaces but not internals. I would say if you have a sealed can this will get quite a bit of carbon and leading out but just know thereâs likely still a lot left behind inside especially 22lr cans. If you can disassemble your can and put the parts in youâll have better success. But prob not any better than wet tumbling (never put aluminum in a tumbler, only stainless steel parts imo) I still have the solution itâs completely black like ink, so Iâll probably throw the baffles back in now that i have them out. Also the black high temp coating (itâs not ceracote from what i can tell) on the stainless steel outer tube seems a little less black now also if thatâs something you care about but doesnât bother me. If you donât wait as long as i did youâd likely get a lot of uses out of the solution likely 4-5 depending on what youâre putting through your cans. Oh donât bother with the kit if your can is over 8â it likely wonât fit with the lid on. Just get the bottle of the suppressor cleaner, works good for muzzle brakes and comps also.
PNW-Z –
Amazing Kit!
So, I had a small number of truly funky silencers. This kit made cleaning them a breeze! Soaked in a bath overnight. Drained, few passes with the brushes, rinsed off, light oiling, and good as new. The fluid is a little pricy, but the stuff just works, so is worth it.
Troy Ringle –
Awesome suppressor cleaner
Works very good on stainless steel rim fire baffles and monocore system. I do not own any suppressors with aluminum components so a word of caution using this system on those. As always, follow manufacturer recommendations for your respective suppressor.
kevz71243 –
Dead air mask 22lr suppressor cleaning results
This was my experience with 2,000rds of just junk 22lr ammo. My suppressor was in desperate need of a cleaning in the worst kind of way. This was my first attempt to clean out my suppressor. I was having accuracy problems, and failure to cycle issues with my Glock Gen 3 g19/ 22lr conversation. The added weight of build up was making the can heavier. I was at risk at potential damaging the suppressor due to all the lead blockage. I had no idea how much lead and other particulates had built up inside of the baffles. Mainly the Kcups closest to the muzzle.Day 1: I was able to remove my baffles/Kcups out of the tube with some hand pressure. It took some effort but I got them out after about 30mins of back and forth pushing and gun spray lube. The inside tube had carbon build up causing carbon locking.I wasnât successful at taking the Kcups apart tho. I didnât wanna risk damaging them. So, I soaked the whole single stack, in hopes the solution would help dissolve whatâs was holding it together. I would give the whole cylinder a swirl ever so often in hopes it would make for faster results. This turn the solution black. I couldnât see the baffles in the solution anymore.Day 2: I poured the solution back into the original bottle. I then removed the stack. Thankfully, the Kcups all came apart on the first attempt. I was feeling very relieved at this point. The cylinder was full of debris a mixture of carbon, larger rings of lead and other materials off the Kcups that had accumulated after swirling and shaking it around. Carbon fouling/ buildup was the first thing to just dissolve right off surface. Was like wiping water off glass. No further cleaning was required on carbon buildup.I placed everything back into the cylinder poured the solution back in. And let it soak for a third day.Day 3: Iâve begun to get impatient and shook the cylinder more often hoping to knock off some more of the build up. It helped, knocking off larger particles right out of the Kcups. I decided that Iâd manually assist with a pick at one point to help remove what was loosely attached. I easily removed more large rings of lead, anything that still sticking to the Kcups. After picking off what looked like actual parts of the Kcups that has fire formed to the surface taking the shape of the internal Kcups. I put the cups back into the solution to further clean and dissolve anything still stuck on.I let it sit a few hours then go back at it with a pick very gently. I didnât wanna mark up the Kcups.After a few hours of this back and forth. I was able to remove everything. I had a factory shinny finish. It didnât require much effort on my part just patience. I believe itâs best practice to help the soaking process by removing the large amounts of molten lead from the Kcups once it loosened that would otherwise hinder the soaking process. But, in the end everything just wiped off or flaked off it took very little effort on my part manually to remove the abundance of lead.Over all Iâm impressed!Iâd say I had a very dirty suppressor. I had let get past the point anyone should allow. All my fault for use junk ammunition and guns that had barrel issues causing lead fouling in the barrel from the start. This solution was able to remove and loosen100% off all the heavy lead buildup and carbon buildup. Resulting in a factory finish.This solution was successful at cleaning all that mess off my baffle cups and restored my can back to its factory finish. Iâd say itâs worthy of 5 Stars.I would recommend a light coat of grease coating on 100% of the inside tube and baffle stack to help with anything sticking to them in the future. It should help with cleanup next time.