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Kentucky teardown project progress

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I know, sounds like Bluegrass tune.
Anyway, with the heat of AZ summer coming on, I'm going to overhaul my Pedersoli Kentucky flinter. Seen videos on removing the barrel and feel fairly confident about it. So, what I want to do is strip and refinish the stock. I'd like to strip the blueing from the barrel and brown it and perhaps have the frizzen professionally rehardened. My first question here is what is the best way to get rid of the blueing on the barrel? Second, recommendations of who is best to do the frizzen?
 
Got it taken down. Have to love YT, there was a video on how to remove a pinned barrel, thank goodness. The rifle was made in 2020. How covid affected factory quality, I'm not sure But I wasn't happy about this being overlooked and not properly sanded (see pic). This is one of the reasons I'm doing an overhaul on it. Also going to cone the barrel and have it browned and have the frizzen reworked.
gun2.jpg
 
Strip the stock with paint, and varnish remover first. If you sand it first you will probably make the stock to small. Thier isn't a lot of wood, to begin with.
Vinegar will work good on the metal parts.

Dave
Good advice. I'm going to do this painstakingly slow. After stripping I hopefully wont have to sand anything. I hope the factory job is good enough.
 
Garden hose is perhaps a bit over gunned but water and a brush to clean the stripper out is on track. You will find that the factory finishing isn’t up to your standards and some sanding is necessary. You can straighten out some details as well. Use a ruler to check that flats are flat and contours flow smoothly.
Go easy if you cone the barrel it takes very little to make it work well. I just use my thumb and a bit of sand paper with complete satisfaction.
 
If you are going to cone it, find Flintsteel on here for his coning tool, caliber specific. Easy to use.

The Doc is out now. 😎
Got one and already coned a plains rifle. Works as advertised. Don't recall who made the suggestion, but using a patch on the internal end to keep from grinding the rifling further down the barrel is a capitol idea.
 
I would like to stain the stock a deep brown color. How many times can I stain walnut before I get minimal returns? How long do I leave each coat on before wiping off?
Also, has anyone ever used boiled linseed oil on a gun stock? If not, what do you recommend?
 
Thanks JB67, but your avatar pic got me thinking. I have some wood stain that is labeled "gunstock" procured from Lowes. Never liked it on my knife scales but tried it in the barrel channel and it looked really good. Went ahead and stained the entire stock and it came out with the color of the stock in your picture. I'm going to put at least one more coat on. Should I lightly sand the wood before applying the next coat? Would it benefit any to do that?
 
Thanks JB67, but your avatar pic got me thinking. I have some wood stain that is labeled "gunstock" procured from Lowes. Never liked it on my knife scales but tried it in the barrel channel and it looked really good. Went ahead and stained the entire stock and it came out with the color of the stock in your picture. I'm going to put at least one more coat on. Should I lightly sand the wood before applying the next coat? Would it benefit any to do that?
That is actually a blend of Saddle Tan and Dark Brown Fiebring's leather dye on my stock, which happens to be a Traditions kit. I haven't done much with wood stains.
 
Thanks JB67, but your avatar pic got me thinking. I have some wood stain that is labeled "gunstock" procured from Lowes. Never liked it on my knife scales but tried it in the barrel channel and it looked really good. Went ahead and stained the entire stock and it came out with the color of the stock in your picture. I'm going to put at least one more coat on. Should I lightly sand the wood before applying the next coat? Would it benefit any to do that?
I would use one of the finer Scotch Brite pads in gray or white between coats to take down any raised grain while not taking too much stain off the surface.
 

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