1, Even some German rifle manufacturers painted actions/barrels in silver to make fake stainless rifles. The only part of a rifle I really want in stainless is the inside of the barrel all else can be painted/oiled/protected. 2. My steel barrels are rusty after a few hours of wet hunt on the coast.
edi
Rossi M92 lever actions were all Stainless steel except for the locking bars and sights.
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Pretty sure the Ruger No.1 stainless was too.
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The finish has very little to do with the overall performance of stainless steel. In fact, a dull finish would be a rougher finish and thus have the ability to hold corrosives to the surface more so than that of a smooth finish. The old Remington SPS rifles were notorious with their blasted finish for rusting as did the 870 Express shotguns. The surface had much to do with this. I've seen this while hunting ducks on the salt water here in the east.Stainless is fine as long as it's a dull finish.
Scout is 416 stainless.Are nickel and chrome coating not effective at repelling rust?
At some point you just want a gun that doesn't rust, even if silver looks cool.
If nitride or nickel or whatever is better at repelling rust I'm into it. I understand being unhappy about ceracote.
What is the cva made out of?
I think you have a very valid point in regards to surface finish vs corrosion.The finish has very little to do with the overall performance of stainless steel. In fact, a dull finish would be a rougher finish and thus have the ability to hold corrosives to the surface more so than that of a smooth finish. The old Remington SPS rifles were notorious with their blasted finish for rusting as did the 870 Express shotguns. The surface had much to do with this. I've seen this while hunting ducks on the salt water here in the east.
The composition of the stainless is a bigger factor to it's performance.
I live in Ireland, never said I was Irish.Ah the Irish.
1. the Germans have higher standards than most industries, I never encountered a firearm advertised as stainless (neither in Europe nor America), which was "painted silver".
Privat sellers on the other hand, are trying to sell nickle plated guns a stainless, this is very common, due to their incompetence.
2. rusting after a few hours of hunting?
You must be hunting in the ocean, under water with corrosive ammo.
Keep in mind many Ruger parts are made from castings, all the grades mentioned to date in this thread are wrought products. Castings can be very easily customized at the foundry ladle (and marketing inevitably then tries to spin the end result as some kind of special formula).Curious sake, I went over to ruger.com to check what they use. They don’t specify exactly.
The Ruger M77 is made with a 400-series stainless steel, which is a proprietary blend used for its high-quality components. This type of stainless steel is known for its durability and resistance to corrosion, making it suitable for firearms.
That not completely true either, it came with non-stainless sights as well, as per Winchesters own website -Neither rifle is all stainless. Everything, including springs, screws, and trigger parts were stainless steel on the model 70’s.
True. I've had carbon steel rifles that were highly polished (Mauser did quite a few of these back in the day) that resisted corrosion quite well. - danThe finish has very little to do with the overall performance of stainless steel. In fact, a dull finish would be a rougher finish and thus have the ability to hold corrosives to the surface more so than that of a smooth finish. The old Remington SPS rifles were notorious with their blasted finish for rusting as did the 870 Express shotguns. The surface had much to do with this. I've seen this while hunting ducks on the salt water here in the east.
The composition of the stainless is a bigger factor to it's performance.
This ^^^^View attachment 1046524
s&w
- Forged 416 SS Receiver
- 19.25" 410 SS Barrel
You’ll find some “higher end” gun companies using 17-4
They’ll all “rust” corrode, even the 300 series.
I’ve decommissioned environmental monitoring wells made from austenitic grades that are completely pitted and generally “rusted” to.




























