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Tri‑Metal Quick‑Release Gun Cleaning Brush Kit - Electric Blue

Price:

17.60


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Range Armorer Quick‑Release Gun Cleaning Kit - Electric Blue

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Built for shooters who actually burn powder, this gun cleaning brush kit turns fouling into a quick chore instead of a weekend project. Tri‑metal brushes—brass, nylon, and stainless—snap onto a ball‑bearing quick‑release handle with a 6" extension for deep, controlled reach. Hex shanks drop straight into a drill when carbon won’t quit. All of it locks into a tough electric‑blue hard case that rides clean in the range bag and keeps your cleaning workflow fast, organized, and ready.

17.60 17.6 USD 17.60 24.00

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Range Armorer Gun Cleaning Kit for Sale – Built for Real Round Counts

This isn’t a coffee‑table cleaning set. The Range Armorer Quick‑Release Gun Cleaning Kit is for shooters who actually run guns hard and want their maintenance kit to move as fast as they do. Tri‑metal brushes on hex shanks, a ball‑bearing quick‑release handle, and a true drill‑ready interface turn stubborn fouling into a five‑minute job instead of a Saturday project.

Pop the electric‑blue case and it looks less like a novelty kit and more like a compact armorer’s bench: brass, nylon, and stainless brushes laid out in disciplined rows, a 6-inch extension locked in beside a quick‑release handle, every piece with a dedicated slot. It’s organized, it’s efficient, and it’s built for people who know their way around a bore snake, a bench block, and a can of CLP.

Gun Cleaning Kit for Sale with Tri‑Metal Brush Control

Most generic gun cleaning kits throw in a random grab bag of brushes and call it a day. This kit is unapologetically built around tri‑metal control—brass, nylon, and stainless—so you can match the brush to the job instead of gambling with your finish.

Brass, Nylon, and Stainless: Three Metals, Three Missions

  • Brass brushes: Your go‑to for serious carbon removal without going nuclear on steel surfaces. Brass is softer than barrel steel, tough on fouling, and perfect for routine bore and chamber work.
  • Nylon brushes: Ideal for light carbon, polymer frames, optics mounts, and anywhere you want to scrub aggressively without risking finish damage. These are your first pass in tight, delicate spaces.
  • Stainless brushes: Reserved for the real problem areas—baked‑on fouling in ports, brakes, pistons, bolt faces, and stubborn gas system deposits where a softer metal just skates over the top.

Because every brush shares the same hex shank interface, you can swap between brass, nylon, and stainless in seconds without changing your grip, your angle, or your workflow.

Quick‑Release Gun Cleaning Handle that Works at Your Speed

The heart of this gun cleaning kit is the ball‑bearing quick‑release handle. That mechanism is what separates this set from the dime‑a‑dozen plastic‑rod bundles.

Ball‑Bearing Quick‑Release: Why It Matters

  • Fast brush changes: Snap a brush on, run the pass, pop it off. The quick‑release coupler lets you swap tools without unscrewing rods or fiddling with tiny adapters.
  • Smoother rotation: The bearing action allows the brush to track the rifling or tight channels more naturally instead of binding and skipping like a fixed, square‑shouldered rod.
  • Consistent feel: The handle’s size and contour stay constant. Only the working head changes, which gives you better feedback when you’re scrubbing chambers, rails, or gas blocks.

Add the 6-inch extension and you get the reach for longer barrels, buffer tubes, and hard‑to‑hit recesses while keeping the same positive control at the handle.

Drill‑Ready Hex Shank Brushes for When Carbon Fights Back

Every brush in this kit is mounted on a hex shank, and that’s not an aesthetic choice. Hex means zero spin in a chuck. When you’re dealing with caked‑on carbon in a compensator, flash hider, or gas system, hand pressure alone sometimes isn’t enough. Drop the shank into a low‑speed drill or driver, keep the passes controlled, and let the tool do the heavy lifting.

Used correctly—short bursts, proper brush choice, and plenty of solvent—that drill‑ready interface turns what used to be a miserable scraping session into a quick, repeatable process. It’s the difference between shrugging and skipping maintenance, and actually cleaning the gun because it no longer feels like punishment.

Compact Hard Case Gun Cleaning Kit Built for Range Life

The electric‑blue hard plastic case does more than look good in a gear pile. It solves the classic cleaning‑kit problem: chaos. Molded slots lock each brush, the handle, and the extension into place. No rolling parts, no mystery "where did that brush go" moments.

The flat rectangular profile slides into a range bag, truck compartment, or safe shelf without eating space, and the integrated carry handle makes it a grab‑and‑go piece of kit. When you open it on the bench, everything is visible at once. No digging, no dumping a pouch onto the table, no wasted time.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Automatic knives live in a very specific legal space in the U.S. Federally, they’re regulated under the Switchblade Knife Act, which mainly restricts interstate commerce and mailing, not simple ownership. The real decisions happen at the state and sometimes local level. Some states now allow automatic knives for everyday carry, others limit them to law enforcement or active military, and a few still ban them outright. Before you buy or carry any automatic knife, check your current state and local laws—length limits, opening mechanisms, and carry restrictions all vary and they change over time. Treat legal research as seriously as you treat blade steel and action quality.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

Enthusiast language and legal language don’t always line up, so it’s worth being precise:

  • Automatic knife: A knife that opens its blade using stored energy (usually a coil or leaf spring) when you hit a button, push a lever, or actuate a hidden release. Most side‑opening autos fall here.
  • OTF (out‑the‑front): A specific type of automatic where the blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle. You’ll see both single‑action (button to deploy, manual reset) and double‑action (the same control deploys and retracts) OTF knives.
  • Switchblade: Often used as a blanket term in law for automatic knives in general, especially in older statutes. In enthusiast circles it’s usually shorthand for side‑opening autos, but in legal codes it tends to cover both side‑open and OTF designs.

Mechanically, the key is the presence of a spring‑driven, hands‑off opening. Legally, the wording in your state determines what’s allowed and what isn’t.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

When you evaluate an automatic knife, look at more than just the fact that it fires. A serious piece is defined by its action tuning, lockup consistency, and steel choice. A well‑built auto will deploy with authority but without frame rattle, lock solid with minimal side‑to‑side play, and use a blade steel that actually holds an edge under real‑world cutting—think proven formulations with a known heat‑treat range instead of mystery metal. Add in a well‑designed button or trigger that’s positive to engage but resistant to pocket‑deploy, and you’re looking at a knife that earns its keep in a collection or an EDC rotation.

Own Gear That Respects How You Actually Use It

If you’re the kind of buyer who can feel the difference between a sluggish auto and a tuned action, you already think the same way about maintenance. This gun cleaning brush kit is built on that mindset: right tool, right material, right mechanism, laid out in a way that doesn’t slow you down.

From tri‑metal brushes on hex shanks to a ball‑bearing quick‑release handle and an electric‑blue case that keeps your workflow tight, it’s the firearm cleaning equivalent of a well‑tuned automatic knife—purpose‑built, efficient, and satisfying every time you put it to work.

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