I agree with Wayne. There is a difference between "wanting" and "needing" to clean.
I believe the weapon design and function greatly factor into the cleaninng routine. But we cannot discount the propellent residue as well. These three things combine to determine the "want" or "need" of cleaning frequency.
Glocks generally seem to function with all kinds of stuff in them (within reason). That is one reason that a little lube goes a long way in a Glock. The less oil, the less contaminants retained. As a Glock armorer, I can tell you I've seen some REALLY dirty weapons come in for a full tear down, and the junk in there can be amazing. I always ask "How did it shoot?" and the resounding answer is "Fine. Why do you ask?"
Same goes for the good ol' Rem 870; it is pratically flawless in cycle duty. It's not the fastest or the lightest or the prettiest, but by gosh it functions and cycles with absolute certaintity, and that's why it's my favorite "get off my property" gun. There is no mistaking the slaping sounds of "ker-chink/ker-chunk" when a chambering a round; it is an attention grabber that no one can ignore.
That is why I also like the AK-47S and Ruger Mini- rifles. Simple, and reliable. Not the most accurate, but these things can be run with any kind of crud in them, any kind of ammo from any third-world country, and go "bang" when you need them to.
Some weapon designs such as the 1911 can be hyper-built into fantastic target tools, but they often loose "battle readiness reliability" in the process. I'm not talking hundreds of shots, but rather thousands of shots. It seems to me that as they become more accurate, they become less tolerant of dirt and grime. Want a reliable 1911? Get a "loose" one that is accurate enough at 25 yards, and can run junk ammo. The most "reliable" 1911 I had was a Chinese Norinco. It would simply fire when my Springfield would cease, and I treated them both mercilously.
The reality is that some weapons are not the most accurate, but they are WELL more accurate than I am (and I ain't a bad shot), and they cycle with 100% reliability in the worst conditions you can reasonably expect a firearm to function. Part of this reliability comes from the fact that they can use any ammo, and are able to get rid of the propellent gasses with little retention of the residue, and what residue does stay in the weapon seems to not affect the function of the weapon greatly. So, regardless of whether or not the ammo is "dirty", some weapons just deal with the "dirt" better than others.
When it comes to weapon design and function, you have to ask at what level will they be used as a percentage of intent. In other words, will you keep it so clean that it would only see 50% of it's design tolerance for crud? As you approach the design limits of any particular weapon, you start to become more and more exclusive in key design criteria. As you approach 80% or more of design capacity, the accuracy and reliability become mutually exclusive. A Glock and a Kimber can both fire clean ammo for several thousand rounds, but at some point the Kimber will become a questionable entity where the Glock still offers 100% function. The Kimber is much more accurate, but the Glock is much more reliable. If one keeps both weapons clean, the advantage goes to the Kimber. As the conditions deteriorate, the advantage shifts to the Glock. Using "dirty" ammo only exaggerates this condition.
Bottom line? A tight, accurate gun can fire clean ammo reliably. But a well designed gun can fire ANY ammo reliably, with enough accuracy to do the task at hand.
Edited by dnewton3 (07/28/10 05:54 AM)
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dnewton3
Glock and Armalite certified armorer