ChrisG
AH elite
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2015
- Messages
- 1,591
- Reaction score
- 2,966
- Location
- Adirondack Park, NY, USA
- Media
- 45
- Articles
- 2
- Member of
- NAHC, NRA, Rocky Mtn. Elk Foundation.
- Hunted
- USA, Canada
So I got this rifle as pieces and parts from the owner. It was in pretty rough shape with some putting, and a cold blue (really just a thin iron selenide coating) that was uneven and unsightly. The buttstock had been replaced and finish inlet with... maybe a dremel tool? It was oversize and very poorly finished (you could still see tool marks in the wood from the stock duplicator.) I wish I had taken more pictures...
This is the pile of internal parts. You can see the bluing wear on the lever and the poor finish job on the trigger assembly as well as the Home Depot screws used to install the recoil pad.
These are the barrel bands after they were cleaned up. Cleaning up all the rust and bringing the finish back down to bare metal was done initially with phosporic acid and then a lot of elbow grease to bring it to a 400 grit shine. This process was then done for the hammer, trigger, trigger assembly plate, lever, magazine tube, mag tube plug & follower and the reciever and barrel.
Here is the barrel and receiver cleaned up:
This is the pile of internal parts. You can see the bluing wear on the lever and the poor finish job on the trigger assembly as well as the Home Depot screws used to install the recoil pad.
These are the barrel bands after they were cleaned up. Cleaning up all the rust and bringing the finish back down to bare metal was done initially with phosporic acid and then a lot of elbow grease to bring it to a 400 grit shine. This process was then done for the hammer, trigger, trigger assembly plate, lever, magazine tube, mag tube plug & follower and the reciever and barrel.
Here is the barrel and receiver cleaned up: