I'm posting this mainly out of excitement. I got down with some serious wire wheeling and steel wooling today on my CVA Tower Pistol project (it was poorly made from a kit). In the meantime, I have a few quick questions:
1) For now, I'm thinking of leaving the barrel in the white. It was left white when I got it, although it had rusted over time. It's now really good looking again, and I'm inclined to leave it white for a while and enjoy shooting it. Any thoughts on leaving it unfinished? Right now I just ran an oiled gun patch over the surface of the barrel, the same way I store all my guns when I know I'm going to be away at college. Just regular Hoppes gun oil... Any other tips on keeping the corosion demons away, besides keeping it in a safe with a dehumidifier, which I intend to do too?
2) Small crack in the stock. It's right where your pinky finger would go if holding the gun, stretches from about the buttplate up to where the trigger guard begins (about 1/2 or 3/4"). It does not go through the stock. My inclination is that it's not dangerous right now, but any tips on stopping the crack, or any dangers this crack might pose? Since the crack origionated from the buttplate screw being overtightened, I filled the screw hole with some tough glue to try and hold out against the crack, which has helped in the past with a maple table I once made... I was thinking at some point maybe I could fabricate a custom buttplate to cap the entire butt up to the trigger guard of the pistol. Maybe heat it and shrink it around the butt to prevent the crack from filling out any more, but that would be some time in the future before I can devote that much energy to this project.
3) Considering the tower pistol in general, would it be more historically correct to blue it, or brown it? This is a caplock tower pistol, so I guess historical correctness probably isn't the biggest concern anyway, given that the vast majority of Tower Pistols I've seen have been flinters...
4) A more general question, but how to care for the lock? It is also unfinished. Right now a thin film of Hoppes gun oil protects it. The internals are lubricated relatively heavily as well... Any other thoughts?
5) Is there a stock wax that I could use on the pistol? I don't want to make it slippery to grip with a sweaty hand, but a little extra protection on that wood could never hurt... Can regular wood/furniture wax be used?
Your general thoughts are appreciated. I will post up pictures as soon as the nipple and nosecap come in the mail and the pistol is truly complete. Thanks, and happy (late) Thanksgiving!
1) For now, I'm thinking of leaving the barrel in the white. It was left white when I got it, although it had rusted over time. It's now really good looking again, and I'm inclined to leave it white for a while and enjoy shooting it. Any thoughts on leaving it unfinished? Right now I just ran an oiled gun patch over the surface of the barrel, the same way I store all my guns when I know I'm going to be away at college. Just regular Hoppes gun oil... Any other tips on keeping the corosion demons away, besides keeping it in a safe with a dehumidifier, which I intend to do too?
2) Small crack in the stock. It's right where your pinky finger would go if holding the gun, stretches from about the buttplate up to where the trigger guard begins (about 1/2 or 3/4"). It does not go through the stock. My inclination is that it's not dangerous right now, but any tips on stopping the crack, or any dangers this crack might pose? Since the crack origionated from the buttplate screw being overtightened, I filled the screw hole with some tough glue to try and hold out against the crack, which has helped in the past with a maple table I once made... I was thinking at some point maybe I could fabricate a custom buttplate to cap the entire butt up to the trigger guard of the pistol. Maybe heat it and shrink it around the butt to prevent the crack from filling out any more, but that would be some time in the future before I can devote that much energy to this project.
3) Considering the tower pistol in general, would it be more historically correct to blue it, or brown it? This is a caplock tower pistol, so I guess historical correctness probably isn't the biggest concern anyway, given that the vast majority of Tower Pistols I've seen have been flinters...
4) A more general question, but how to care for the lock? It is also unfinished. Right now a thin film of Hoppes gun oil protects it. The internals are lubricated relatively heavily as well... Any other thoughts?
5) Is there a stock wax that I could use on the pistol? I don't want to make it slippery to grip with a sweaty hand, but a little extra protection on that wood could never hurt... Can regular wood/furniture wax be used?
Your general thoughts are appreciated. I will post up pictures as soon as the nipple and nosecap come in the mail and the pistol is truly complete. Thanks, and happy (late) Thanksgiving!