skwerleater
40 Cal
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2018
- Messages
- 397
- Reaction score
- 571
Meant to put that in another thread
Amen!Man what would this hobby be without super glue and JB Weld?
Super nice! I gotta try this with a Lyman kit. Yours looks so much more 'real' with the work you've done on it. ThanksI finished up this Lyman kit. Stained it dark, draw filed and polished the barrel. Put a couple inlays and an overlay and can’t wait to try it out!!
Hey friends,
I was fitting a plug to a new horn and managed to go a MM too far, cracking the spout.
I know this will be a simple fix, but want to hear your expert solutions before I pick one to execute.
How would you go about repairing such a crack?
Hey friends,
I was fitting a plug to a new horn and managed to go a MM too far, cracking the spout.
I know this will be a simple fix, but want to hear your expert solutions before I pick one to execute.
How would you go about repairing such a crack?
I had a horn crack like that. I filed a groove around the circumference and poured a pewter ring. Filed it flush and it’s held for the past 10 years or so. I didn’t glue the crack but maybe I should have. Anyway, it works and looks cool too.
A lot of traditional original horns with split ends were repaired with sewing thimbles with the small end of the thimble removed. Sewing thimbles were an item traders carried , where ever they went on the frontiers. There are examples pictured of this repair , in horn books. In actuality , a modern time repair would be good with the addition of some Epoxie glue, as well.
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