Where to buy rust bluing solution?

Awesome, thanks! I had fumbled on PJ's website, and I looked for more info on Radocy products but I couldn't find their their website or anything... so I wasn't sure about it.

But if you tell me it works great, I'm going to try it! :)
 
Affirmative. They replied me with a very kind and informative e-mail. They have been selling the Antique Rust Blue for the past six months.
 
Paul no longer sells Radoxy, he can't get the suppier to sell to him, he told me. PJ now sell their own brand which is formulated for them. I have bought some recently but not tested it yet.


I am aware of that they inform you at time of purchase. I have the newer solution and it works well.

I don't know if they ship when it is winter as I believe it is not to be frozen.

R
 
fzrburn;
Good afternoon sir, I trust this finds you well on a cool, windy Sunday.

I've been making my own rust bluing formula for a couple decades now and use something quite close to the one in the link below.

http://www.homegunsmith.com/archive/T8338.html

I would be remiss however if I didn't set out a couple of warnings though before anyone makes their own.

First the containers must be glass - jars have worked for me so far - but thick jars are better.

Wear protective glasses and gloves and mix this in a well ventilated area.

Mix the two acids together very, VERY slowly.

I use uncoated nails instead of cast iron chips, but again there is a requirement for a well ventilated area and perhaps a charcoal respirator wouldn't hurt either.... There is an orange/brown gas that comes off when the nails are added and you DO NOT want to breath it.

Anyway once it's mixed it does calm right down and works really well.

I cut mine with enough distilled water so the rust pitting/oxidization is "just right" after 24 hours - so I can work on them after supper and after work. Some of the initial tries might pit the metal too deeply if your solution is too severe off the start.

Store the solution in a plastic container with a plastic lid and out of direct sunlight - it'll last for years and perhaps even decades.

Hopefully that was useful for you or someone out there wanting to do their own rust bluing. By all means give me a shout if you think I can answer any further questions.

Good luck on your bluing jobs whichever way you decide and all the best to you in the upcoming weeks.

Dwayne
 
This is what I use and it works great if you follow the (very simple) instructions. If you leave it too long it will pit.

Slow Rust Bluing Solution

1Tbs salt
2oz vinegar
8oz hydrogen peroxide

Fully clean and degrease parts.
Apply sparingly and sit for 3 hours.
Boil in distilled water.
Card with denim or degreased 0000 steel wool between coats. Up to 12 coats may be needed.
After final coat, boil and carding coat it with a good gun oil or I have also waxed it as well with paste wax.
 
The PJs stuff is an express rust blue. If you do lots of prep it comes out absolutely beautiful. They won't ship it October-April due to the freezing problem. I've used it on a few Rosses, a Carcano and a few other odds n sods and it works very well. Just make sure you go at least 5 cycles more than you think you need and soak the parts in the blackest filthiest Diesel engine oil you can get your mits in after and it is awesome. The blotchiness on the bolt is the color change from the case hardening. This stuff simply darkens the case colors.

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