Brett's solution to use lacquer thinner is by far the best. He does not recommend acetone, but acetone does work if the cleaning pad is well saturated for the whole duration of running down the lines.
Oh, certainly, my problem is that it always evaporates before I get to the other end. Otherwise, anything in the lacquer thinner/acetone family is the way to go, better than alcohol/water (ionic solvents) and better than oily covalent solvents like Stoddard solvent/mineral spirits. Or, as some people use, *fuel* which has both alcohol and oil!
In any case, they get absolutely filthy pretty quick in most conditions, and cleaning them until the paper towel comes out clean, I consider mandatory. By the way, while it should be obvious, I once assisted a *very highly experienced* modeler, whose name you would certainly recognize, who was complaining that his (stranded) lines were still feeling sticky, even after he cleaned them. Seemed hard to understand, but then I saw he was using a rag that looked like it was found in the dumpster at Jiffylube - absolutely black. I said, "hey <<Mr famous name>>, try using a fresh paper towel" About 10 passes and half a can of lacquer thinner later, clean, and hey, guess what, it doesn't hunt any more.
Stainless solids, that's another story, I tried everything and then gave up, as have most people. ANYTHING, repeat, ANYTHING left on the surface will cause it to either lock together, or drag. The two things that I put on them that didn't drag them up - graphite powder and dry teflon spray, won't last an entire flight. Real music wire is better at not hard-sticking than the super-polished stainless, but it's a huge pain to keep from rusting - without, again, using something like oil, which makes them draggy.
Brett