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02-12-2016, 03:41 PM | #13 | ||||||
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All one has to do is disassemble both a hammer gun and a hammerless to understand the weakness of the hammer compared to the nearly twice as thick hammerless. I was spoiled in my thinking by the latter.
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02-12-2016, 08:28 PM | #14 | ||||||
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jerry i hate that your stock broke...in all these old guns im like you i use heavy loads..i ve only ever had but one broke stock in shooting these old guns it was a 1894 remington double barrel hammerless.. was shooting doves and i thought the old gun had doubled on me butonly one shell had fired..it broke the stock..i glued it back to gether and then put a tape around her and shes holing up fine...charlie
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02-12-2016, 09:02 PM | #15 | ||||||
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On the contrary Carl ,epoxy can be thinned ...I've worked on a couple bad ones in the past .
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02-12-2016, 09:49 PM | #16 | ||||||
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For stabilizing old, clean, dried out, punky wood which is better? The super thin cyanoacrylate or thinned epoxy? I have used the thin cyanoacrylate and it soaks up like water and seems to go real deep, leaving old abused wood like a rock. I have not tried thinned epoxy. I do bed with acraglass after soaking in lots of cyano. I know many luthiers rely on cyano and even finish fretless fingerboards with it. Not sure what folks think of it in the gun world.
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02-13-2016, 12:39 AM | #17 | ||||||
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My original reply was to thin epoxy to get into the crack ,it will be stronger than super glue
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02-13-2016, 08:36 AM | #18 | ||||||
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How do you thin epoxy? Lacquer thinner?
__________________
"Striving to become the man my dog thinks I am" |
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02-13-2016, 10:02 AM | #19 | ||||||
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Interesting article.
http://www.westsystem.com/ss/thinnin...-system-epoxy/ |
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02-13-2016, 10:45 AM | #20 | ||||||
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CA glue will penetrate soft punky wood and make it rock hard. Wood turners use it for "splated" bowls. Wood that actually rotten and coming apart. Those natural edge bowls you see, bark on the edges. Squirted with CA before they are turned. I keep it in my shop in 3 viscosity's thin, medium thick, and a special formula intended for toy race car tires that has some elasticity dry. Useful on fly rods tha have to flex.
I don't use it on gunstocks though so thin it seeps into places I might not want, and once on it won't come off no 2nd chances. Total re work save something that's a loss otherwise, it's the stuff to use. You can get epoxy in different viscosity too. Look at West Systems web site. Others probably as good but West packages and provides technical assistance better than others. William |
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