Page 1
Page 1
Started By
Message

Owners of Browning BPS pump action 12 gauge, is cleaning/maintenance difficult?

Posted on 9/30/16 at 2:29 am
Posted by Albino Potato
Member since Jan 2016
810 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 2:29 am
I hear how bad it is on all forums over the internet to break it down. Several were saying it's too difficult to clean it thoroughly so they'd bring it in to the gunsmith once a year. Now I thought that was ridiculous because a Remington Wingmaster is easy to do yourself even though it's more expensive at first, would save you the money of going to a gunsmith. I wanted to hear from some of y'all who own a BPS or know firsthand about how difficult it is or if people are just being dramatic?
This post was edited on 9/30/16 at 3:00 am
Posted by SlapahoeTribe
Tiger Nation
Member since Jul 2012
12104 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 2:44 am to
A gunsmith will tell you that it isn't difficult to clean (for a gunsmith). There were guns that I hated cleaning and this wasn't one of them.

Unless you drop it in the mud and let it sit up for a few days then I'd recommend that you only do simple cleaning and bring it in to a gunsmith once a year for a proper job. That's all it needs anyway.

Pro tip: bring it in at the end of the season and have it cleaned then... not a week before the season starts.
Posted by Albino Potato
Member since Jan 2016
810 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 2:52 am to
Oh so you didn't have issues breaking it down and putting it back together? Also, does it need to be brought in once a year? Reason I'm asking is I want it to last a long time but I don't want a gun that Im always bringing in and can't do the proper maintenance myself. I hear the Remington Wingmaster is easy to clean yourself and stays out the shop unlike the BPS. That just seems like a bunch of bologna to me.
Posted by ChatRabbit77
Baton Rouge
Member since May 2013
5861 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 3:03 am to
New Remington blows. Go with a BPS over that. I hate Browning though so my best recommendation for a pump is the Benelli Supernova. That one is super easy to clean as well.
Posted by Albino Potato
Member since Jan 2016
810 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 3:08 am to
I got a lot of mixed reviews on the Benelli Nova.
Posted by SlapahoeTribe
Tiger Nation
Member since Jul 2012
12104 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 3:53 am to
quote:

you didn't have issues breaking it down and putting it back together?

Nope. But I had all the right tools.
quote:

does it need to be brought in once a year?

Not really, no. Just something that most people are advised to do because most people don't do a very good job of cleaning their firearms. Not that most are bad, but most don't want to deal with it.
Also, we check it for worn parts and I won't put anything back in backwards (which happens more often then you'd think with all types of firearms).
quote:

want it to last a long time

If you take care of it then it will last a very long time.
quote:

but I don't want a gun that Im always bringing in and can't do the proper maintenance myself.

If your familiar with other shotguns then there isn't anything particularly difficult with it.

If you know how to read schematics then I'd recommend you get the PDF from Browning (just google it) and make sure you put it back together properly.

This shouldn't be your big concern. Just find out which shotgun you like using and go with that... cleaning is only ever going to be the smallest part of ownership (unless it's a Remington 742... then you're fricked ).
Posted by Capt ST
Hotel California
Member since Aug 2011
12845 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 5:39 am to
Getting the rails back in is a PITA, other than that if you know how to break down a weapon and clean it, it's not that big of a deal. Remington 887 if you're looking for gun that's low maintenance.
Posted by REB BEER
Laffy Yet
Member since Dec 2010
16212 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 5:59 am to
I have a BPS10 that I've hunted with since 1998. It has never been broken down; the only cleaning it's ever gotten is being sprayed down with WD-40 and it's still the smoothest pump I own.

I really don't think you can go wrong with the BPS.

And btw, I have 2 wingmasters and the BPS is a much better gun IMO.
Posted by Big_country346
Member since Jul 2013
3624 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 6:07 am to
Don't own a BPS, but I'll second the supernova. I took it apart and cleaned it fairly easy when I first got it just because I was young and thought I had to. Pawpaw said I didn't have to do all that BS. So 11 years later, it's never been cleaned and operates like the day I got it.
Posted by Albino Potato
Member since Jan 2016
810 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 9:25 am to
That's what I like to hear.
Posted by White Bear
Yonnygo
Member since Jul 2014
13905 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 9:30 am to
Nah, I don't own one but have torn a couple down, cleaned and re-assembled. Not bad but not 870 easy. I'd buy 12 BPS's over a junky-arse Nova even though I'm dangerous with a bps due to that tang mounted safety.

One of those 2 BPS's had a magazine switch above the forearm that I though was unique, that one was the trickiest of the two.
This post was edited on 9/30/16 at 9:34 am
Posted by White Bear
Yonnygo
Member since Jul 2014
13905 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 9:33 am to
quote:

(unless it's a Remington 742... then you're fricked ).
742 is a mofo, especially if it gets wet.
Posted by Tear It Up
The Deadening
Member since May 2005
13480 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 1:14 pm to
quote:

I have a BPS10 that I've hunted with since 1998. It has never been broken down; the only cleaning it's ever gotten is being sprayed down with WD-40 and it's still the smoothest pump I own.


I bought my 12ga in 1999 and never broke it down to clean. I use CLP in the barrel and on the outside.

Check out Youtube videos if you are interested in how difficult it is to break down completely and clean.

Or spend $20 to get it cleaned thoroughly if you have been particularly rough with it.
Posted by baldona
Florida
Member since Feb 2016
20481 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 1:32 pm to
I've had my BPS for over 15 years and that's laughable to take it in to a gunsmith to clean it. Its my turkey and anytime the weather is nasty. I just take the barrel off and use some spray solvent where I can't get to. Maybe I should be cleaning it better but it feels and shoots the same as always.
Posted by ecb
Member since Jul 2010
9348 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 2:35 pm to
If I can do it, you can do it, but I rarely feel the need to break it down all the way
Posted by mallardhank
Atlanta
Member since Feb 2006
1276 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 6:14 pm to
It is a bitch to put back together
Posted by BayouBengal51
Forest Hill, Louisiana
Member since Nov 2006
6547 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 6:56 pm to
I never found the BPS hard to put back together and I've been breaking mine down after every two or three hunts to clean since I was a kid.

The key is to putting it back together is having the pump about halfway back on the tube. Then the barrel just about almost falls back into place on it's own. If it fights you, just move the pump backwards or forwards a little bit and it just falls in place.

At least that is how it's always been for me on my BPS pumps and my fathers. Now granted I've had mine since I was 13 so I don't know if things have changed in the overall design since I got mine.

Posted by cgrand
HAMMOND
Member since Oct 2009
38822 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 7:08 pm to
drop the slide, unscrew the cap, pull the barrel out, pull the spring out
are y'all doing more than that?
because mine has never gone any further than that during 25 years
Posted by BayouBengal51
Forest Hill, Louisiana
Member since Nov 2006
6547 posts
Posted on 9/30/16 at 7:29 pm to
quote:

drop the slide, unscrew the cap, pull the barrel out, pull the spring out are y'all doing more than that? because mine has never gone any further than that during 25 years


That's all I've ever done. It is a pretty simple shotgun to break down.
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram