For the field, I take a bore snake, a small bottle of solvent, and a rag. In my truck, I have enough tools to field strip and clean and do minor repairs - torque wrench, cradle, rods, patches, solvent, rod guides, etc.
My cleaning technique:
1. rod with bronze brush wet with Hoppe's, 5 strokes.
2. rod with jag, patch wet with hoppe's. 1 stroke
Repeat 1 and 2 either 3 or 4 times. 1 dry patch.
1. Wipe-out accelerator, 1 wet patch.
2. Wipe-out patch-out, 1 wet patch.
wait 15 minutes.
push 1 dry patch. If nasty, repeat 1 and 2 but no more than once. Push one dry patch. Done.
Over the years, I have tried lots of techniques and with one exception this IS my technique and I don't change it. I do not want my guns to go down. The technique minimizes the throat wear, gets the barrel clean enough, and keeps the crap out of the action so the gun stays up. The exception: if I want to take the barrel down to the metal, I will use JB. This is drastic and rare and blows the zero and group size for about 100 rounds.
I user
BoreTech rods I also have Dewey rods, the BoreTech seem to last longer. For 22-cal weapons I use a 22-cal rod with bronze brush and a separate 22-cal rod with Dewey or BoreTech jag. Same for 30-cal except with 30 cal rods, brush, and jag. I use Hoppe's with the bronze brush and wet patches. I have used Sweets, Ed's Red, TM, shooter's choice, KG12, Butch's, and several others. I use sinclair
rod guides I don't have any of of the solvent port type. I clean the chamber with AR10 or AR15
chamber brush. I use one of
these to contain the spray and wet patches, it clamps over the muzzle and catches the crap. I use
these cotton patches for 30-cal, the heavy duty ones don't work for me. I put solvent into
these short bottles. I use
this Sinclair cleaning cradle, mine is set up to hold two guns side by side. I go to Menards and buy the blue shop paper towels and the red shop rags. I use both.