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Plus, gun socks are cheap. Buy a bunch and use them when storing your gun and when transporting them in your full length case. |
About 35 years ago, my bestie was going on a 3 year assignment in Japan, so tried carefully to store his guns in his safe, with the guns in treated socks. When he came home, many of the stocks were screwed up by some chemical that was in the socks. A melluvahess.
I assume things have changed in the last 35 years. |
While LOM cases are very cool (and I have several) they mostly stay on the shelf and I transport my guns in long cases for the very reasons Daryl noted above. And I also know from experience as I once watched a set of barrels slide across the pavement :crying:. Some scratches but no major damage fortunately.
And I may be wrong, but IMO if you're worried about oil soaking into the wood you're using too much oil :whistle:. |
I use long cases for the reasons mentioned also. I once had the forearm slip from my hand and really do a number on a nice stock.
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Not to mentioned lubing the critical areas of your guns action. If you take them apart to fit into a takedown case you really should wipe that lube off then reapply it when reassembling it. Not something I'm willing to do between coverts or fields in the cold or rain. Just my routine...do what floats your boat.
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Gun storage
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And there is no reason for those cute little cut outs that separate guns in the gun safes. You can get a lot more guns in them without all that interior gingerbread. West of the Rockies we don't have to worry about rusting humidity, until you get west of the Cascades.
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The balance of a gun on its nose would freak me out. Waiting for them to topple. If you use a quality product that seems to "dry" such as G96 and don't lube it like a leaking Drott and I don't see where there should be any concern. There have been guns stored for hundreds of year on their butt that don't exhibit any issues from oil in the stock head. I have shotguns I have owned for over 40 years that were bought new that have zero signs of oil soaking in the stock head and not rust or corrosion whatsoever....
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Yeah, I have had hundreds of guns that have been butt down for fifty years or more with no soaking in the wood. I have also had guns stored butt down without any flattening of the recoil pads. I have no idea how long guns have been stored on their butts resulting in flat pads. It has to be more than 50 years, because some of mine have been stored longer than that without damage to the pads. My guns that are not in trunk cases are stored butt down without any apparent damage. My guns that are cased are in cases with lids closed, all without damage.
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I store my guns butt down in the safe. If you're worried about oil soaking into the wood, don't squirt it into the firing pin holes! A lightly oiled rag is all you need on the metal. I also don't like the butt above the barrels. Too easy to tip over. JMHO. Everyone has their preferred way, which in their mind is the correct way, so keep on doing as you wish.
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