Does any one know there is a difference between finish nails and wire nails that are used for finishing?
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I guess if it,s a finishing nail and you used it...it,s finished....Does any one know there is a difference between finish nails and wire nails that are used for finishing?
If you're talking about gun nails, they're not round.Does any one know there is a difference between finish nails and wire nails that are used for finishing?
Ok this was ‘something I read’ u think back in the 1980s. I can’t link to it or confirm it, I don’t know where the picture of the gun would be, but here goes.Guessing there has been a thread cleanup in the adult beverage aisle…….
No reason why a finishing nail or any other ferrous material wouldn’t work for a pin. Personally, examples of pin material I would definitely avoid include copper, brass, wood or plastic, but honestly haven’t tried these options, among others one may think of.
I have heard folks say wire coat hangers work just fine, but I’m going first class and am willing spending the extra dollar or so for better pins in my builds. Necessary? I don’t know. But I find it hard to understand how someone will expect to sell a gun for maybe thousands of dollars, yet complain about the cost of a material upgrade for a handful of pins that adds less that a few bucks to the cost of a build.
But there just aren’t any specifications for custom builds.
Back to @sqqy14 ‘s OP. Someone just trying to pin an old gun’s stock and barrel. Use what fits. I doubt the rules committee will be by anytime soon to make an inspection.
Beautiful woodI started taking apart a beautiful rifle a friend gave me on his deathbed, the trigger had problems. As I punched out the trigger guard pins, I found that the builder used finishing nails for the pins but left the heads on them. The rifle was built in the early 70s, obviously by a hobby builder.
Every pin I punched out took a chip out of the stock on its exit because of the nail heads, I fixed the chips and replaced the pins I removed with music wire. I wanted to remove the barrel but didn't want to chip out any more places on the stock.
The rifle has amazing wood in it;
View attachment 212378
Bright finish are plain nails.A number 4 finishing nail (plain, not bright) and a number 50 drill bit work just fine. Drill the hole, then ream it just a little with the same bit, and you get a nice fit.
Everybody knows there is one & only one correct way to do anything, and that would be my way!Pretty easy to start an argument around here.
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