I did a quick stock refinish on the SKS refurb I got from Frontier this last weekend.
It had a wear marks behind the trigger guard and from shipping the rifle with the accessories rolling around loose in the box, the silly heathens.
I happened to be in Canadian Tire and noticed they sell a clear and an orange shellac in a little can for $10. I bought the orange shellac, a liter of methyl hydrate, a bag of 0000 steel wool and a few throw away foam paint brushes.
I refinished a Russian double barrel shotgun I have first to see how it was going to work out.
That methyl hydrate removes the old varnish instantly and I ended up with a stock a bit lighter colored than I prefer. No problem, I’ll redo it again later with a bit of stain on the wood before applying the shellac.
So now the SKS stock.
I did not strip the existing shellac off or sand it, I like that red color.
All I did was very LIGHTLY buff it with the 0000 steel wool and cleaned off the dust.
I poured some well stirred shellac in a glass and added a tiny bit of methyl hydrate to thin it a bit.
The shellac dries very fast so thinning it slightly helped to avoid leaving brush strokes.
I hung the stock from a wire and painted fairly quickly, paying a bit more attention to the locations that had rub marks, brushing back and forth there a couple times to mix the color of the old shellac with the new shellac, and done.
Waited an hour or so and gave the stock another light 0000 steel wool buffing and applied a second coat.
All the shipping scuff marks are pretty much gone and the rifle looks great.
I’m no longer concerned about scuffing up the stock on these things, I’ll buy another can of shellac and refinish it whenever the urge hits me.
It left me thinking, damn that was easy.