Bubba got lazy...

davemccarthy707

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
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...and Dave scored! 1943 Maltby No 4 Mk 1 with Mk III ladder sights for 200 bones. Just gotta fix the paint on the stock. I was thinking circa 1850 stripper. Any thoughts?

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WTF is that supposed to be? I can't fathom any scenario where naval grey and walnut brown would camo into anything. Unless the guy did his stalking around really really ugly wallpaper.

Great find though. Might want to try some scotchbrite and see if the paint will just scrape/peel off, if not, attack it with stripper.
 
Yeah lol, it will scrape with my fingernail easy enough. However the top pieces are not even close to the buttstock in finish so I might as well strip it all. I have lemon oil there for my rosewood guitar neck. I wonder what that would be like for a finish?
 
Scotchbrite will remove metal/polish aluminum and steel. It'll rip right through that old BLO finish. Either way, you'll probably have to refinish anyway. I'd go with the stripper and a couple coats of raw linseed oil, then a couple coats of boiled linseed oil.
 
Scotchbrite will remove metal/polish aluminum and steel. It'll rip right through that old BLO finish. Either way, you'll probably have to refinish anyway. I'd go with the stripper and a couple coats of raw linseed oil, then a couple coats of boiled linseed oil.

It shouldn't if you use Extra/Very Fine and be very gentle. Works great for both polishing and cleaning gunk of all kinds of surfaces.

As far as finish goes, BLO is one step above nothing in the utilitarian department. Personally I prefer many coats of hand-rubbed Tung oil. It hardens and seals the surface of the wood, and can be made matte or ultra-gloss, depending on your methods. Not historically correct, mind-you, but far superior to BLO.

My .02 for what it's worth.
 
WTF is that supposed to be? I can't fathom any scenario where naval grey and walnut brown would camo into anything. Unless the guy did his stalking around really really ugly wallpaper.

Great find though. Might want to try some scotchbrite and see if the paint will just scrape/peel off, if not, attack it with stripper.

That's to camouflage your self against a rusted out battle ship.
 
I was thinking circa 1850 stripper. Any thoughts?

I use Circa 1850. It cuts through paint very easily. It will remove all the finish easily, but paint VERY easily. You might want to try a light rub with a small amount of Circa on a cloth, just on the paint areas; just to see if you can get it to cut the paint without damaging the other finish.

If you then decide to just strip the entire thing, Circa will do the job easily and leave the patina.
 
Spectacular Dave. She looks superb! Give us more details on dates and was she FTR'ed etc etc. I got a story similar I'll share in a new thread perhaps.

Something about finding a Service rifle that escaped the butcher for 70 years, and was able to keep her Christening dress on!
 
Hey, that cleaned up nice. Nice wood. Have you BLO'd it yet? It looks dry.

Restoring them is way more satisfying than buying a perfect one, isn't it?
 
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