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#3 | ||||||
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Guards are nitre blued vs barrels are rust blued. Rust blue is more durable.
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B. Dudley |
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Brian Dudley For Your Post: |
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#4 | ||||||
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Brain: Thanks, is nitre blue faster and less costly process?
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#5 | ||||||
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Another way of expressing it is that rusting bluing is achieved by applying multiple layers of rust which is carded off until the desired depth of blue is achieved. Case color is a pleasant side affect from the necessary process of casehardening and has very little durability unless the parts are externally lacquered. Nitre blue is another heat related process which has little durability and little depth but is inexpensive for manufacturers
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Craig Budgeon For Your Post: |
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#6 | |||||||
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Quote:
Now, to topic - are there any manufacturers that rust blued trigger guards and other appointments, save screw-heads, in general practice? I'm 'guessing' Parker? The guards and SBP's on my PR's appear to have the soft glow of rust bluing. |
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#7 | ||||||
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In some ways CCH is more dureable. Even if the case coors are not visible anymore the protection remains. Not really what you were mening I know but i couldn't help myself.
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"The Parker gun was the first and the greatest ever." Theophilus Nash Buckingham |
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#8 | ||||||
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Lacquer is clear and protects the CC to a point. Marlin used it on there L.C. Smiths and some rifles , Turnbull has used it, and Galazan has sold it. Oh you'll be able to see your engraving just fine if its used on an engraved gun, provided you don't choose a 5 yo to apply it. Perhaps Win. 21's, Tobin, and some Bakers used a hot blue on receivers and trigger guards but I doubt it was rust blue ------- to labor intensive.
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#9 | |||||||
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Quote:
Please, share the material that you use and, your technique. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Scot Cardillo For Your Post: |
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#10 | ||||||
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My two cents on the clear lacquer, I've got a couple of guns with either good original colors or ones that have been redone. Wanting to use the guns and not wear them, I used clear "brushing" lacquer which is available at Lowes. Cheap, about $10 a quart which will do a thousand guns.
Here is what I found. If there is no lacquer there, it goes on perfectly and smoothes out streak-free with an artist brush. If there is a existing coat, it streaks because the new breaks down the old. The solution is to remove old coats which one of the refinished guns had. When I nitre blue trigger guards I can protect them with a coat of clear and it makes the blue deeper and offers protection so I don't have to do them over. It will wear through eventually. Remove it and clear them again. |
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