• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Refinishing Indian Made musket

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

TheThunderGun

32 Cal
Joined
Dec 9, 2023
Messages
23
Reaction score
23
Location
Alabama
I already know there are some haters for the Indian made muskets I've had no fault yet. However I want to refinish the wood on my Brown Bess 1st Model to get it close to an original, I know they are made with teak wood but was curious if anyone had a good stain and finish they would put on the wood to refinish, I atleast want to take of the lacquer and refinish it. I was thinking about sanding it down lightly and restaining with walnut stain or a maple stain and finishing eith truoil that i will dull down with fine steel wool and mineral oil. I may add some patina to it in the process of finishing. Im more concerned about which stain to use? Those were just my initial thoughts. Thanks in advance.

-Donald
 
Fieblings brown leather dye and tung oil makes for a good finish.
IMG_1300.jpeg
 
Beautifully done how many coats of tung oil did you use? Did you dilute the leather dye? I definitely think I'll follow this I love the way that turned out. I might put it on a few pistols.
I removed the factory finish with citristrip and scraped everything with a razor blade. I put the leather dye on straight and let it dry. Then four coats of tung oil and steel wooled between coats. No sandpaper was used. I also browned the lock. I didn’t even remove the barrel.
 
Last edited:
I removed the factory finish with citristrip and scraped everything with a razor blade. I put the leather dye on straight and let it dry. Then four coats of tung oil and steel wooled between coats. No sandpaper was used. I also browned the lock.
The top left is the before.
IMG_1206.jpeg
 
....I know they are made with teak wood..... I was thinking about sanding it down lightly ....
I'd suggest not sanding. Teak isn't especially amenable to sanding. The sandpaper gets really logged. The wood is really soft. You'll end up removing more wood and modifying the contour more than you expect if you're used to walnut or maple. I'd suggest steel wool. You might take a look at what I did with my Sea Service pistol:
https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/...istol-from-loyalist-arms.186013/#post-2716044
 
I'd suggest not sanding. Teak isn't especially amenable to sanding. The sandpaper gets really logged. The wood is really soft. You'll end up removing more wood and modifying the contour more than you expect if you're used to walnut or maple. I'd suggest steel wool. You might take a look at what I did with my Sea Service pistol:
https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/...istol-from-loyalist-arms.186013/#post-2716044
Thank you! I didn't know not to sand teak wood. I've heard it's hard enough I didn't know it was a bad idea to sand it. I'll follow armorer Roy's steel wool advice and yours as well. Thank you
I'd suggest not sanding. Teak isn't especially amenable to sanding. The sandpaper gets really logged. The wood is really soft. You'll end up removing more wood and modifying the contour more than you expect if you're used to walnut or maple. I'd suggest steel wool. You might take a look at what I did with my Sea Service pistol:
https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/...istol-from-loyalist-arms.186013/#post-2716044
What brands of tinted linseed, mineral oil, red tinted paste wax did you use? Think I might try your finishing method.
 
....

What brands of tinted linseed, mineral oil, red tinted paste wax did you use? Think I might try your finishing method.
Transtint dye, and boiled inseed oil and regular mineral oil. This finish job I tried Mequiar's paste wax for the first time and it worked out fine. I've been trying to find a suitable replacement for Johnson's, and both Mequiar's and Mother's seemed to work pretty good. Both available only at auto parts stores. Mequiar's gives a little better shine but is harder to buff. IMO there's none better than Johnson's, but you can't get it any more.
 
Back
Top