You can also easily and quickly age brass simply by rubbing used wiping patches all over the brass surface. Make sure the wiping patches are damp and the dirtier the better.
Yeah it's the exact same model and I'm going to use the mounting screws.Your rifle looks like my Model 120B, which was made in 1976. Do you plan on drilling the rear sight and use the existing holes in the barrel to mount it? I am undecided on mounting a rear sight with screws or filing a dovetail on the barrel to mount a different rear sight.
I had my rear sight apart to tighten it up yesterday. The rear sight mounting screws on mine are spaced 1.460" apart center to center. The pin that attaches the long moveable part to the rear sight base is 0.041" in diameter.
Nah, I'm a tung oil kinda guy.Nice wood in the stock. Are you going to use boiled linseed oil or Tru Oil to protect the wood?
Weld it up with what? I'm a carpenter not a welder.Weld it up, file it down, redrill from the backside. Trying to hand drill a curved surface is a pita, on the backside the bit will be less likely to wander.
Thanks, did all of that with the top hole from the back, did that with the back hole but only from the front and I did it with that little voice in the back of my head screaming no, don't do it!! Yeah, I have a drill press and I'm not sure I want to give up on this one yet, I can always fill it and if I don't like it then get a replacement. I'll think about it.Welcome to the club. There are those who have drilled holes off center and those who will. I should be president of the club.
I know you don't want to hear this, because you have a lot of time invested. I would be inclined to order a new butt plate. Like 44Bro suggested, I would drill the new butt plate from the backside. I would drill the hole first before doing all the file work you did to remove casting marks and shaping the butt plate.
Using a really sharp center punch before drilling makes a world of difference in keeping the drill bit from wandering. Filing or carefully grinding a very small flat on the back side of the butt plate before you use the center punch and drill helps a great deal too. Just don't file the flat too wide, maybe as wide as the diameter of the largest drill bit you will be using to drill the hole. The idea is to make sure you cannot see the area where you filed the flat after you install the butt plate. After the hole is drilled, you can chamfer the hole from the side of the butt plate you will see.
Do you have a friend who owns a drill press? If not, a hand drill will work. I like to drill at the slowest speed possible when I drill a hole on an irregular metal surface, especially the pilot hole.
Like I said, you are not the first person to do this. It happens.
So far the work you've done looks really nice.
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