Looking at the works and subsequent careers of some of the few survivors of the trenches, I think it's fair to say that the losses to England, the Commonwealth, and human society in general that were inflicted by WWI are incalculable. Meaning, fortunately for our peace of mind, unknowable.Did I say something wrong? The msds on renwax is 80% naptha 20% microcrystalline wax. It was designed for metal. Use on wood *could* have the effects described, especially if the original finish is heavy on tree resins.
I tried using naptha as a thinner. It was a disaster.
What I should have said re traditional skill was, it is my understanding that the war killed much of the labor and the clientele, meaning that many tidbits of information died with them. Those who were left met perfect conditions for making nice guns: art deco, boom times, cheap labor, etc.
Try and google Purdy's maintenance videos. They say to hand rub in small amounts of boiled linseed oil and that is it. No wax. In my thinking wax creates a barrier to any future "feeding" of the wood in a high quality hand rubbed oil finished stock. Best to use whatever the stock is originally finished in. Otherwise why was the stock finished in that way to start with? Oops Purdey's.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PPVipIBpekU
Dont do it big bad. Tru-oil is for refinishing and not maintenance. It applies like an oil, but dries like a varnish. If you want to just treat your stocks, do as suggested and occasionally use tiny amounts of BLO along with wax.
You will not be pleased with what tru-oil will do for your purpose
Do Brits sweat? I tend to store muzzle down any gun that I have done a proper internal clean and service. Then later move it to the muzzle up position after checking for and wiping any oiley residue I may have overlooked. I would need twice as many gun safes if I stored all my guns muzzle down. Also very lightly grease as per the Purdey advice otherwise wipe off any oil applied for surface protection or use a non oily protectant like Baricade on non moving parts. It also doesn't hurt to properly seal the hidden wood parts on the head of stocks or forearm wood. Most modern U.S. Marketed guns only properly apply finish to the exposed wood surfaces you can see. This is one of the problems with oil getting into the wood.
Dont do it big bad. Tru-oil is for refinishing and not maintenance. It applies like an oil, but dries like a varnish. If you want to just treat your stocks, do as suggested and occasionally use tiny amounts of BLO along with wax.
You will not be pleased with what tru-oil will do for your purpose
I'll echo that statement!
I just got done cleaning all of the dust, sunscreen and sweat off of my sporting clays gun that accumulated this weekend. Think I'll stop by Lee Valley tomorrow and get some of their Conservators wax to try out on it.
This seems like a sensible approach when the number of guns starts to become unwieldy in the safe. I have a custom walnut rack in mine that allows for 27 guns muzzle up. I have yet to figure out a design that would hold the same muzzle down. BB, the solution to the concern you have about the muzzles, when stored muzzle down, is to make sure they don't rest on carpet or whatever fabric lines the bottom of your safe. Part of my solution, should I ever redo the rack, is a walnut base (probably three strips as I have three rows of guns), with dedicated "sockets" so the muzzle is resting on hardwood but yet won't slide or slip. No retained moisture in the material and enough angle to the barrels to ensure they aren't sitting dead flat and air circulates into the barrels.
As a non oil protectant for use on metal, I love Eezox.
Thanks CB. It occurred to me last night that I have take-down cases for 2 of my better guns, so if there's room I can use both instead of just one to store them in my good safe. That will not only prevent oil creep doing harm but will protect the second gun from dings as it gets jostled around. Getting fussy in my old age I guess.