• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Did I ruin grips

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
There's a big milky white spot on my dining room table from setting something wet and hot there. It never goes away either.
 
You are also in the long term warp and twist area, that kind of saturation is not good for wood (yea I am a poet)

Just an aside, true story, I was there. Doing a roof for a Picnic Shelter, 35 feet long, 20 across. Broke the first band for tongue and grove (3/4 or 1 inch). Spwang. I have never seen the like since, that stuff exploded in all 3 dimensions, it warped up or down, bent along the edge and twisted. I have seen any single one of those on the usual poor wood we get now but not all three, occasionally two, never 3.

It had been kept dry under a shelter roof, but it was the last on the shelf and they restocked each year and it got put to the back. No one could say how long it had been there. My job was to see what the longest length I could get that was reasonably st right. 12- 16 feet long. 4 ft was common and I had sections of 2 ft (beams were 2 feet apart).

For sure you never ever want wood to get wet, it does bad things to it as well as changes ability to get a finish on it.
 
There's a big milky white spot on my dining room table from setting something wet and hot there. It never goes away either.
and you still have all your skin?
i did that to the brides Oak claw foot / footed/ feet round dining table. she was away for a couple days. never noticed the table top had been refinished. did ask about the smell lingering in the house though. told her it was Ballistol.
 
Apparently the grip (not grips) is staying milky white. Lesson learned, do not submerge in boiling hot water to clean.
And thx to Phil, sending me a replacement g-r-i-p. Singular.
If i think of it i will post a picture later when home.
Yes! There is no good reason to submerge these guns in any liquid, hot or cold… let alone with the stocks in place.😂
 
If you want to try something for the heck of it, paint some hellmans mayonnaise on the wood and let it sit for a while. It’s a trick used to get water rings from glasses out of table tops. Maybe you can salvage them grips or that grip
Well I'll be, they finally found a use for mayonnaise.
 
Back
Top