He does a great job...I assume on yours he put his normal 1.25" knurled/crosshatch finish on the muzzle end for a non-slip grip.steelerzzz said:I have a solid brass rod from October Country that I had made so that with a cleaning/loading jag it is flush with the end of the barrel on my GPR and A&H mountain rifle.They put an"antiqued finish" on it..it blends in perfectly with the brown finish on these guns. The little extra weight actually helps to hold steadier for offhand shooting. The brass rods look great,and are pretty much indestructable!
You could loosen the screws that hold the pipes and turn them a little bit
If you know some one with a lathe simple putting a slight undecut or grove in the rod will gives the spring a pllace to grip the rod. If no lathe a file and some time spent could do the same thing.
Just a thought. How about trying a little piece of heat shrink tubing or thin rubber tubing on the end of the spring? You'd probably only need about 1/8" - 3/16". Just enough to give you a little friction.
You can drill and tap a small shallow hole in the muzzle end of the underrib and set in a small screw. This is not noticeable, but exerts pressure on the rod to retain it in place. I have done this with a steel replacement rod, worked fine (on a short barrel)
Mark Lewis said:Powder fouling provideds a great antique finish.
mazo kid said:If I was to make a brass ramrod, I wouldn't carry it on the rifle (weight); instead just use it as a range rod. But, that's just my opinion.
Bill,shoot a heavy coat of Easy Off original formula on the rod let it dry wash it off reapply if needed.I have done a complete TC with it and gives a great antiqued look.Got the idea from site about antique fakery..Funny only part of my TC that wouldn't take well was the wedge pin might have been a harder alloy or something but the all brass works well with it.Here are pics of the look you will get on these few parts.Compare the brass tacks which are with a mild color from the blackpowder residue..Rayroundball said:I bet he uses a commercial product like Birchwood Casey's Brass Black and I have a new bottle of it that I've never opened...I've gradually accumulated spare brass ramrods I don't use so I'll clean one with acetone and treat it with Brass Black...see how it goes on, how durable it is, etc...if it darkens things significantly, I might treat the rod I use for turkey hunting to cut down the shine.
Another important test will be how easy it is to remove if I don't like it
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