But you made it a #1 Priority to post on the largest forum in Canada - a topic called "Tenifer, Glock, and “Toughness” - One season’s guiding & bushpiloting on a G40" .....
....and posting comments such as: "...she’s showing her age... one season..."
Your posts title and content appears to focus on criticizing (premature - only one seasons exposure..?) rust on Glocks Tenifer finish....?? and yet all you post is a picture of rust on things attached to said Glock...NOT any photos of actual rust on the Glock Tenifer finish.
Additionally..., when you are asked to provide actual pictures of the (your) Glock Tenifer finish (rusting so you say..) on your post which is clearly focused on condemning said finish - you can not provide .... because and I quote: "...it’s low on my priorities list.."
No evidence. No crime.
Just sayin'.......
Nice idea, will try it outG96 synthetic oil is absolutely fantastic on my oudoor locks. Even great with the dial lock on the garden shed. Spins like a top in -30
I recall an excellent report on oils and rust that tested many products. I will look for it.
The One SHot Hornady spray oil did very well and I bought a case of it.
A rust preventive gunk suitable for storing a gun might be terrible to use on and in a gun that has to be ready to fire. In cooler weather, the gunk could stop a gun (stricker fired) from firing.
Seems to me that you need a spray on product you can regularly spray and flush your pistol with. You have a benchmark - WD40. Try something else. G96 and One Shot would be on my list. Whatever it is, it has to be thin enough to not gum up the striker pin channel. One Shot is very light and looks to be perfect for the inside of a gun.
This test included G96:
http://www.dayattherange.com/?page_id=3667
This guy tested with a caustic salty brew.
I can't believe I'm going to wade in here, but...
If all you ever do is shake the gun in river water and once in a while spray it with WD40, you are not maintaining your tools in a reasonable manner.
These are still mechanical things with small corrodable parts. The slide might be Tennifer (likely not given the age of the gun - they use a less robust but more environmentally friendly finish now), but not everything is.
In the military, guns are generally not tennifer and seen worse conditions. The difference? They maintain them on a semi-regular basis with appropriate methods that don't include river water and WD40. They do include cleaning patches, solvents, oils and rags.
I find it hard to believe you are away from decent tools and lubes for long enough to make the gun work unreliably. I don't want to judge, but I would suggest you could be doing more to help that gun resist the environment without jeopardizing the quality of the service you provide to clients.
If you fear for your safety enough to carry it, you need to bite the bullet and give it a reasonable level of attention and maintenance like the rest of your gear.
And by the way... stainless guns will have the same issue. Stainless guns rarely are all stainless and do contain springs, screws, etc. Stainless also does rust in salt water. It just takes longer - probably comparable to a tennifer slide.
Ok, probably a completely stupid thought, but here goes...
It seems to me that this isn't a gun that you use regularly when out "there". It's on your hip as a life insurance policy. Is there a way to seal the gun up to keep the elements out that wouldn't affect the functioning? Sort of like having it inside a plastic bag, but maybe a bit more technical
Of course, once fired, the seal would be gone, but I would think that would be the least of your concerns, considering why it would be fired.
Lol if you had to trust your life to your ability to properly draw and fire a pistol, would you want it to be in a ####ing ziplock??![]()