- Joined
- Jul 24, 2018
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Anyone who has been in the military knows that issued weapons stay "new" for about a week after being in the hands of Joe . I saw M16s that looked like they were run over by a truck and M9 Berettas with less finish than some of the original 1860 Armies I've seen. Field use is hard on guns especially by 18-25 year old dudes who don't really care about them
Joe existed in 1861 just like he does now....1861 Springfields and 1860 Armies were carried in the rain, cleaned over and over for inspection, dropped, stacked, banged around, sweated on...revolvers lived in holsters for years at a time . Nothing stayed new very long . Rub that revolver with coffee grounds once per week and wipe it with a canvas cloth covered in oil. See how new it stays.
It's not like they were carefully cleaned and put away in a dehumidifier equipped safe after being fired once every 2 months like most people's guns
If you want to really age a repro, just treat it like it isn't yours for 6 months like it's something you have to carry and not lose, and keep clean enough to not have to have 2 weeks pay forfeited. Don't be careful with it at all. It will look field worn in no time
Joe existed in 1861 just like he does now....1861 Springfields and 1860 Armies were carried in the rain, cleaned over and over for inspection, dropped, stacked, banged around, sweated on...revolvers lived in holsters for years at a time . Nothing stayed new very long . Rub that revolver with coffee grounds once per week and wipe it with a canvas cloth covered in oil. See how new it stays.
It's not like they were carefully cleaned and put away in a dehumidifier equipped safe after being fired once every 2 months like most people's guns
If you want to really age a repro, just treat it like it isn't yours for 6 months like it's something you have to carry and not lose, and keep clean enough to not have to have 2 weeks pay forfeited. Don't be careful with it at all. It will look field worn in no time