Cleaning My Pardini SP for the first time
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Cleaning My Pardini SP for the first time
Any suggestions on cleaning my Pardini SP for the first time? How often should it be done? Thanks for any information. I am new to bullseye shooting...any info is helplful.
How often will depend on the pistol & the ammo. If the ammo isn't too feeble or dirty, you should be able to go several hundred rounds between cleanings. I can shoot 500 or more rounds of CCI standard velocity without a problem, but only about 20 rounds of Aguila SV. My wife's can go 400 rounds or more of Eley Sport.
I use a light oil on the barrel and the recoil spring, and a dab of grease on the bottom of the slide where the hammer rubs, where the disconnector rubs, and a thin smear on the top of the slide where the slide rubs against one of the cross pins. It may be hard to see on a new pistol, but over time, you will see wear marks where lube is important.
I use a light oil on the barrel and the recoil spring, and a dab of grease on the bottom of the slide where the hammer rubs, where the disconnector rubs, and a thin smear on the top of the slide where the slide rubs against one of the cross pins. It may be hard to see on a new pistol, but over time, you will see wear marks where lube is important.
Thanks
Thank you for taking time to answer my questions. It will be very helpful when my husband and I take apart the gun for cleaning. Much appreciated! By the way...if you live in Connecticut, any pistol where the magazine loads in front of the grip is now considered an "assault weapon" and must be registered. Furthermore, these types of pistols are now banned for future sales within the state. Too bad for my husband!
Back to your original question about cleaning Pardini SP - send an email to great folks from Pardini USA (info@pardiniguns.com, not associated, just customer) and ask for their Newsletter from November last year. It has excellent instructions for cleaning, including photographs.
piotrp
piotrp
Re: Cleaning My Pardini SP for the first time
Just look on YOUTUBE. Pardini USA has many videos.
Re: Cleaning My Pardini SP for the first time
It sounds like things are covered on YouTube. I made up a set of SP cleaning videos for the collegiate team I help coach, and have them posted there as well. Unfortunately, the university's lawyers won't let me make them public until I put a legal disclaimer on them. I need to figure out my video editing software to do that. If somebody would like to view them, they can send me a PM with their email. I can send them the disclaimer, and a private link. I'm hoping to get the disclaimer editing figured out over the holidays when the students aren't breaking things...
- crankythunder
- Posts: 255
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- Location: The ugly side of Hell, Michigan
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Re: Cleaning My Pardini SP for the first time
HI 22shooter.
Back in 2013 I purchased a Pardini SP New Bullseye edition and have used it continuously ever since purchasing it. I also shoot it a lot, attend up to 5 matches a week year round.
I shoot CCI SV in my Pardini and based on my ammo purchases, I go through between 2 and 4 cases of ammo a year. Doing the math, that translates to approximately 150,000 rounds that have been cycled through my Pardini.
And while I have streamlined the cleaning process with a bucket container holding all the tools, rags, cotton swabs, Gynecological Daubers (yes I use them to clean out back where the hammer is and the recoil buffer, they are available on Amazon), and rags, I am rather lazy in my cleaning schedule. Granted it only takes me ten or 15 minutes to clean but what can I say. I like competing a lot better then gun cleaning.
I have experimented with the cleaning schedule, done a couple of endurance tests, and determined that I can go to about 2,000 rounds fired before experiencing malfunctions due to lack of cleaning. When that has happened, I figure that so much debris has accumulated in the bolt above the barrel that it is hindering the bolt from cycling properly. Generally, the bolt will not retract enough to eject the empty shell and will not pick up the next round in the magazine. The bolt will then cycle the empty brass back in the chamber and the hammer will probably be cocked although sometimes it is not.
With that being said, I try and clean mine every 500 rounds. I do not get worried about it until about the 1,000 round mark and I can say that I have not had a alibi when following this schedule that was not attributed to faulty ammo.
You guys can go ahead and flame me all you want but this is what works for me.
For what it is worth, I have only replaced three parts on my Pardini, the Recoil Buffer I noticed was cracked so I replaced it along with the main recoil spring housed in the bolt. I checked the recoil buffer the next time I cleaned it and it was cracked again but I have not replaced it. It does not worry me since the pistol functions perfectly as is. The third part that I replaced is the plastic base for a magazine that cracked when I dropped it fully loaded on a concrete floor.
I know that Pardini USA is coming out with some new magazines that are all polymer or plastic in 5 round, 10 round, 15 rounds, and 20 round versions that should prove to be more durable in nature. Not sure if they are available yet but keep your eye on the Pardini USA website.
Regards,
Crankster
Back in 2013 I purchased a Pardini SP New Bullseye edition and have used it continuously ever since purchasing it. I also shoot it a lot, attend up to 5 matches a week year round.
I shoot CCI SV in my Pardini and based on my ammo purchases, I go through between 2 and 4 cases of ammo a year. Doing the math, that translates to approximately 150,000 rounds that have been cycled through my Pardini.
And while I have streamlined the cleaning process with a bucket container holding all the tools, rags, cotton swabs, Gynecological Daubers (yes I use them to clean out back where the hammer is and the recoil buffer, they are available on Amazon), and rags, I am rather lazy in my cleaning schedule. Granted it only takes me ten or 15 minutes to clean but what can I say. I like competing a lot better then gun cleaning.
I have experimented with the cleaning schedule, done a couple of endurance tests, and determined that I can go to about 2,000 rounds fired before experiencing malfunctions due to lack of cleaning. When that has happened, I figure that so much debris has accumulated in the bolt above the barrel that it is hindering the bolt from cycling properly. Generally, the bolt will not retract enough to eject the empty shell and will not pick up the next round in the magazine. The bolt will then cycle the empty brass back in the chamber and the hammer will probably be cocked although sometimes it is not.
With that being said, I try and clean mine every 500 rounds. I do not get worried about it until about the 1,000 round mark and I can say that I have not had a alibi when following this schedule that was not attributed to faulty ammo.
You guys can go ahead and flame me all you want but this is what works for me.
For what it is worth, I have only replaced three parts on my Pardini, the Recoil Buffer I noticed was cracked so I replaced it along with the main recoil spring housed in the bolt. I checked the recoil buffer the next time I cleaned it and it was cracked again but I have not replaced it. It does not worry me since the pistol functions perfectly as is. The third part that I replaced is the plastic base for a magazine that cracked when I dropped it fully loaded on a concrete floor.
I know that Pardini USA is coming out with some new magazines that are all polymer or plastic in 5 round, 10 round, 15 rounds, and 20 round versions that should prove to be more durable in nature. Not sure if they are available yet but keep your eye on the Pardini USA website.
Regards,
Crankster
Re: Cleaning My Pardini SP for the first time
Available here in Norway, also 6 rounds mags. I bought one, primary used for "felt"-shooting (field) that's a nordic competition.crankythunder wrote: ↑Wed Dec 06, 2023 1:31 pm I know that Pardini USA is coming out with some new magazines that are all polymer or plastic in 5 round, 10 round, 15 rounds, and 20 round versions that should prove to be more durable in nature. Not sure if they are available yet but keep your eye on the Pardini USA website.
https://pardini.it/it/accessori/round-magazine/
First shot always results in good group. The others just don't follow
Re: Cleaning My Pardini SP for the first time
When should you clean it, simple, " about 10 rounds before it malfunctions".
You will get to know your pistol. Ther are multiple levels of cleaning from a wipe over to
a full strip and rebuild.
Wipe over and light lube every couple of shoots.
Main areas are build up in the breech area (wax,dirt and residue), clean when visible.
Build up in chamber of lead residue, scrub and clean chamber when bullet is hard to seat.
Annual, full strip and inspection rebuild.
You will get to know your pistol. Ther are multiple levels of cleaning from a wipe over to
a full strip and rebuild.
Wipe over and light lube every couple of shoots.
Main areas are build up in the breech area (wax,dirt and residue), clean when visible.
Build up in chamber of lead residue, scrub and clean chamber when bullet is hard to seat.
Annual, full strip and inspection rebuild.
- Peter Lovett
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Wed Oct 02, 2024 6:27 am
- Location: Hobart, Australia
Re: Cleaning My Pardini SP for the first time
The manual for my Morini CM 22M recommends cleaning about every 500 rounds or so and has in it details on how to clean the pistol. Should you not have the manual I discovered that they can be found on the web. There is a wealth of information on Pardini pistol cleaning on YouTube.
Re: Cleaning My Pardini SP for the first time
As a torture test, I once fired 1100 rounds through my Benelli MP90S before it started acting up. That's with zero cleaning or oiling along the way. One of my MatchGun MG2's is also very forgiving, despite getting visually filthy long before it acts up.
I usually chicken out around 500 rounds and clean them when I have a match coming up.
A lot depends on the ammo you shoot. CCI can vary wildly in terms of how much waxy lube the bullets have, and if you get a batch with a lot of wax, you will need to clean a lot more often. I mostly shoot Aguila, which has a very thin wax coating. A lot of European ammo has varying amounts of greasy lubricant, and that can gunk things up quickly and attract powder fouling.
I usually chicken out around 500 rounds and clean them when I have a match coming up.
A lot depends on the ammo you shoot. CCI can vary wildly in terms of how much waxy lube the bullets have, and if you get a batch with a lot of wax, you will need to clean a lot more often. I mostly shoot Aguila, which has a very thin wax coating. A lot of European ammo has varying amounts of greasy lubricant, and that can gunk things up quickly and attract powder fouling.