Here it is the 4th and I've keep up progress on the Enfield. Early this morning, after letting the stock dry with the third coat of Tru Oil, gave it a quick sand with 400 grit for what I hope is the last coat. I did do a section of the fore end with 0000 steel wool and really liked the look of a satin finish. Tomorrow, I'll do the whole stock and see what I've got.
Spent the rest of the morning working on the brass butt plate and end cap along with the three barrel bands. The brass is much easier to play with! I spent nearly twice as long on the 3 barrel bands as I did on the brass. Figured it just wouldn't be right to have casting seams on the bands.
Once I had those worked into shape I sucked up the courage to blue them and the barrel. As I said earlier I removed the manufactures laser etching of the barrel first with filing, then with finer and finer grits of emery cloth. Ultimately getting it down to 400 grit. Then following Birchwood Casey's instructions I degreased the rings and barrel, rinsed with cold water, applied the rust remover, rinsed with cold water and prepared to blue the pieces. When I had the barrel up on the stand I made to blue it, I could see noticeable tiger striping, runs, and various discolorations left from the rust remover. Not knowing if that would effect the final bluing I took the barrel and went over the whole thing with 400 grit again. That removed all of the shading differences. Then again with the degreaser and a rinse. FINALLY, after drying I was ready to do my first "blue job"!.
Bare in mind I have never done this, and had no idea what to expect (watched a number of YouTube videos though). All I really knew was I had at max a minute to get the chemical on and rinsed. Held my breath and dove in. It definitely was not what I was expecting! I thought I would be able to run the full length of the barrel with 1 applicator stroke, like I was staining wood. Not at all! Maybe 6-8 inches was all I was getting. Had to shift gears and REALLY get with the program. Applied the first coat and while rinsing I rubbed it down with 0000 steel wool to "blend" the color. Brought it in and dried it, scratched my head a bit and applied the second coat. This time I knew what to expect. I think the key was to rub down the barrel as I was rinsing and blending the variations in shades. I only needed two applications to get the desired color. Once dry I applied the Rust inhibitor per the instruction in the kit.
In the end it REALLY looks fantastic! The color is dark enough, (grey blue) without being "black" and there are no tiger stripes or blotchy bits. Really, really turned out well. Like everything else, the devil is in the details, or in this case, prep work.
Now the scary bit is done I'm left with finishing up the trigger guard and taking a look at the lock to get a bit more trigger pull. Right now you look at it sideways it releases. Shouldn't be too much trouble, a bit of filing should do the trick.
Now off to the neighbors for the celebration festivities! Happy Fourth!