Chargerguy
CGN frequent flyer
Tagged for updates
Hey man we ran into each other at the storefront last Saturday, and the product I was thinking of was Fluid Film. It's available in the automotive section of CanTire, and a lot of members here recommended it to me when I was trying to figure out how I was going to store my guns last winter. Could be neat to examine.
How about the spray cans of rust check that canadian tire sells?
Since I have some, I will, thanks for the idea.
I thought anything that would remove rust would remove parkerizing/bluing
Is that the stuff that converts existing rust to ferric oxide? (ferrous?, I dunno but its black and hard)
I use G 96 for a preservative and rust preventitive on all my guns, The method I use on a new gun is to apply a min of 4-5 coatings with a wipe down between coatings. After that just a one wipe down after using. Do the same for the bore as well using a boresnake. Sometimes bore will require 2-3 passes. In my opinion G 96 is a gunmans best friend and superior to other products!
The 3 main forms of rust (iron oxyde) are:
-Fe2O3, aka hematite, aka ferric oxide, aka iron-3 oxide: most common for of rust, that's the red dusty crap you don't want. With water it bonds to become Fe2O3(H2O) and ruins everything. Hydrated ferric oxide (Fe2O3(H2O)) is what's usually called "rust", or atleast the majority of the "rust".
-FeO, aka hematite, aka iron-2 oxide: not often seen naturally, you can produce it industrially. It's a black powder, not hard though.
-Fe3O4, aka iron-(2,3) oxide, aka magnetite, aka magnetic oxide, aka black oxide: That's probably the "black and hard" stuff you refer to. You obtain it by adding carbon monoxyde to ferric oxide. It's black due to a residue of carbon on the top layer. You can also obtain it by completely submerging iron in water, but then it'll constantly destroy and regenerate itself, destroying your iron in the process. It's somewhat protective, but nothing compared to the blueing of a gun. Normally you'd paint the black oxide to protect it. Plus, it won't undo the damages already done by rust, just stop it.
I wouldn't use a product that would turn ferric oxyde to black oxide on my firearm, even if it protects your iron strip. Chances are that it would ruin the blueing.
Check this link out. 46 products tested. Looking at this and some other tests between frog lube and WD-40 specialist, it looks like frog lube clp is tough to beat.
https://www.shootersforum.com/gun-cleaning/91566-results-gun-care-product-evaluation.html
yeah saw that one before
Frog lube, hornandy one shot and wd 40 specialist are the winner
one shot rusted up on one of the 2 boards.




























