A chave simples para militec Unveiled

I read on here somewhere that the blade should be heated to about 140 degrees in order for the Militec to make the proper bond. Is this true?

So for all you "militec is amazing, it whitened my teeth while I was shooting" guys, I have to ask what criteria has convinced you that it is a good lube? This is the only thing that I've seen that resembles any sort of test of lubricating ability and personally I've never seen any difference.

данных (сведения о местоположении; тип и версия ОС; тип и версия Браузера; тип устройства и разрешение

Aprecie abaixo o mapa elaborado pelo Cemtec usando a previsãeste de tempo e temperatura para a capital e certos municípios do interior do Estado.

Well, I spoke to Russle Logan at MILITEC today and it seems that there's some kind of a "history" between Mr. Fennel and MILITEC. Just what that is, I don't know, but the name elicited an immediate response. From what I've been able to find out outside any personal hard feelings between the two, MILITEC seems to be much more widely used, has won enthusiastic responses from military, federal, police, and competitive circles, is easy to buy, readily shipped and insured in its performance.

If you want the "cliff notes" version of my opinion it is this. Militec-1 seems to have excellent lubricating properties, is not really a cleaner by itself, and seems to be pretty weak protection against corrosion.

Militec is a metal conditioner, not a lube. It can be used as a wet lube, but it will bake into the metal as you fire the weapon.

With all the discussion about heat treating I've been worried about heating my blades too much. I've just put a hairdryer on high and put it on the blade for about 5 min, then applied the Militec. The blade was too hot to touch, so I assume it was pretty warm.

As the one champion said, my favorite lube is the one they gave out free samples of at the last match.  

I like FP10 and Weapon Shield but I find there is pelo universal lubricant for all environments. I'll use oil for a carry gun and grease for a high round count exercise, match, or class.

Right now I am expirmenting with a grease, and might give the Militec-1 grease a try when I run out of my current grease.

George Fennell (the creator of FP-10 and now Weaponshield) has a long history that I looked into when he first came to my attention about 12 months ago and I was saying "who the hell is this guy and what is this product he keeps going on about" (probably the same thing folks say about me now).

"Weapon Shield"? Isn't Fennel the guy that made FP-10? What happened to that stuff? It was supposed to be the wonder lube so I bought a bunch and my Uzi and AR both run dry with it - and it doesn't take long. My XD's and 1911's run fine with whatever but I need something more for those 2.  

Also you don't have to clean lube, shoot, lube, right after each other, you can apply to it faster. But you can apply it at your own schedule, it just takes three lubings with Militec 1 before you can it's suggested that you go dry (if you are planning to use it as a dry dê uma espiada aqui lube).  

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