Another Lee Enfield I/D help.

It's a very simple process. Clean the parts down to bare metal with medium to fine steel wool, use the Crud Cutter to remove all oils and dirt in the metal, (it dries really fast). Then using a sponge wipe the blue over the metal in overlapping strokes. It is a very wattery solution. Then let it set for 2-3 min and it will look blotchy, don't worry if it does, it's a chemical reaction that acually corrodes the metal. Then rinse it off with hot water and let dry. You then go over it with 000 or 0000 steel wool to remove the film. It won't look that great at first but repeat this process 3 or 4 times or until it looks good to you. I did mine 4 times. Make sure you wear latex gloves, These chemicals will be hard on exposed skin.
 
Ok,probably high.But consider that the liberal`s themselves calculated 7,000,000 long arms in Canada early in the registery.Which way did they massage the numbers?how many people do you know with a Lee-Enfield club in the broom closet?for much of Canada that and a Cooey M39 .22 are all they own and a large percentage of them forgot they even have them.I think total LE production well exceeded 5,000,000 rifles,not including Pakistan and India.What has been our imported milsurp share over 75+ years?
 
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