I have a few Milsurp that are un-issued, un-fired, straight from the crate and still in the grease. These are not cheaper rifles but are higher value rifles.
I was wiping the wood stocks on some of my other rifles down with linseed oil (the proper oil for these model of rifles), and was wondering if I should so the same with my greased rifles. They don't have grease on the stocks, just on the metal and internally, so I would not be removing much if any.
I figured its normal maintenance that will only benefit the wood. But I started wondering if it could effect value since these rifles were bought for the collection (I have several of the same rifles to shoot) and I didn't want to risk devaluing them, since there value comes from the "untouched" conditions.
Figured I would get some opinions on here. Would the oil hurt the value?, and also, how to other people with higher value, "untouched" milsurps maintain them?
Thanks
I was wiping the wood stocks on some of my other rifles down with linseed oil (the proper oil for these model of rifles), and was wondering if I should so the same with my greased rifles. They don't have grease on the stocks, just on the metal and internally, so I would not be removing much if any.
I figured its normal maintenance that will only benefit the wood. But I started wondering if it could effect value since these rifles were bought for the collection (I have several of the same rifles to shoot) and I didn't want to risk devaluing them, since there value comes from the "untouched" conditions.
Figured I would get some opinions on here. Would the oil hurt the value?, and also, how to other people with higher value, "untouched" milsurps maintain them?
Thanks


















































