Has anyone used Birchwood Casey's Perma Blue? Does it wear well? Thinking about using it.
-Pat
-Pat
That sounds painful……A little heat on your part helps immensely.
Depends what you want to do with it. Perma Blue paste works pretty well for touch-ups. It works through surface contamination. And the residual paste is easily removed. For a better blue of a complete part, though, I'd rather use Super Blue.Has anyone used Birchwood Casey's Perma Blue? Does it wear well? Thinking about using it.
-Pat
Forget the actual motivation at the time, but I blued a framing/ripping hammer with both Brownells’ Oxpho-Blue and Birchwood Casey’s cold bluing and found the Brownells the superior of the two by a little for wear. Forget which I tried first, but the bluing from both products ultimately was quickly worn away. I then rust blued the hammer with Laurel Mountain Forge Barrel Brown. That hammer has since seen years of use and abuse, indoors and outdoors, but the bluing still looks much like it did the day I blued it.Has anyone used Birchwood Casey's Perma Blue? Does it wear well? Thinking about using it.
-Pat
Forget the actual motivation at the time, but I blued a framing/ripping hammer with both Brownells’ Oxpho-Blue and Birchwood Casey’s cold bluing and found the Brownells the superior of the two by a little for wear. Forget which I tried first, but the bluing from both products ultimately was quickly worn away. I then rust blued the hammer with Laurel Mountain Forge Barrel Brown. That hammer has since seen years of use and abuse, indoors and outdoors, but the bluing still looks much like it did the day I blued it.
You don’t know how to have a good time…..That sounds painful……
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