...I also noticed in the pic that off to the side of the silver streaks there are streaks that look almost a copper color. I have all that too. It's bugging me that I don't know and can't find anything to help online. I'm worried it may be copper fouling, it's a brand new glock with a factory glock barrel and I hear fouling shouldn't happen this fast. ....
It seems like these questions re-appear regularly, always with a little twist. It's good that you are paying attention to what is going on with the gun, and I think it's normal that you might be a little over-anxious. After all, you just spent several hundred dollars on a handgun, and after following reasonable cleaning instructions it will not come perfectly clean.
The silver streaks you mention are what I call "staining", probably produced by the heat of burning powder. I know of nothing that will remove this, once it shows up in a barrel it seems permanent, at least on all of my handguns. To clean the powder fouling on top of the staining, I use a powder solvent, usually Hoppe's #9. There are others, of course.
Forgive me for quoting myself, but much of what follows comes from another recent post on a similar topic.
Not knowing how much experience you have with firearms, allow me to tell you how I clean the barrel of a Glock. Before beginning, remove the magazine and clear the weapon of any ammunition. Remove any ammunition from the immediate area. Field-strip the pistol to remove the slide, and then remove the barrel from the slide.
1. Spray the barrel inside and out with gun cleaner spray to get rid of the loose stuff and surface dirt.
2. Wet a patch with solvent, wipe the bore with it, and let it sit for a minute.
3. Vigorously scrub the bore with a bronze bore brush, fore and aft, about fifteen strokes.
4. Spray the (now) dirty bronze brush to remove the fouling from the brush.
5. Repeat steps 2-4 until you see that the wet patch you are pushing through the barrel stops getting cleaner. This will take no more than three repetitions of steps 2-4 in most cases.
6. Run a clean dry patch through the bore.
7. You are finished cleaning the barrel.
Copper streaks are another matter. It does not surprise me that copper streaks appeared after only a few hundred rounds, I think that is common with jacketed bullets. While some copper discoloration is normal and expected, it may build up over time. To remove copper fouling you will need a copper solvent, usually something that smells of ammonia (seriously). The stuff I use is Sweets' 7.62 Solvent, which contains 5% ammonia. Here are the instructions for Sweet's 7.62:
Before beginning, remove the magazine and clear the weapon of any ammunition. Remove any ammunition from the immediate area. Field-strip the weapon to remove the slide, and then remove the barrel from the slide. Does this sound familiar?
1. Wet a loose patch with Solvent, then rub bore full length repeatedly for 1 minute.
2. Push rod all the way through and discard patch at the muzzle.
3. Dry out bore with fresh patch, remove muzzle froth.
4. Repeat procedure until blue discolouring ceases.
5. Do not leave Solvent in barrel for periods longer than 15 minutes.
6. Once cleaning finished protect barrel with a rust preventative such as Sweet's Oil.
There are other copper solvents, of course. The other one I use is Butch's Bore Shine. They both work, and I am sure that other similar products will work as well.
If you use bronze brushes with either of these copper solvents, be aware that the solvent will eat the brushes: that is what it does, after all. So trash those brushes when you are finished with them, they will no longer be big enough to scrub the bore effectively.
Exactly how frequently you need to use a copper solvent is really a matter of many rounds are fired through the gun, and how much fouling appears. It may vary, depending on bullet fit and composition of the jackets. For example, I shot a couple thousand rounds of WWB 115-grain bullets through a G34 in matches, and I think I may have used copper solvent on the bore once, just for the heck of it. I did not notice any change other than the irritating copper discoloration was gone from the bore, until the next time I fired the pistol.
Chris