Walnut finish problem

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Hi,
As long as you sanded the stock smooth after letting the slurry dry, you probably just need to add more coats of finish. It concerned me when you wrote you applied a coat, waited 15 minutes and then applied another coat. I may be misunderstanding you but after sanding the dried slurry smooth, and I hope you let it dry for 24 hours at least before sanding, then apply a coat of unthinned finish. I use a maroon Scotch Bright pad to apply the finish but do not try to sand the stock just use the pad to lay on the finish. I let it sit for no more than 15 minutes and then wipe all of the excess finish off the stock. Get it out of every nook and cranny. Then let dry for 24 hours before applying the next coat using the same procedure. Keep applying finish until you get sheen you want. It will take a few days or a week to do it. No need to sand between coats but you must let the previous coat dry for at least 24 hours before putting on the next coat. You will eventually have shiny and dull areas as the finish builds up. Just keep applying coats until you have the look you want and it is even. The secret is wipe off all excess finish and let dry for 24 hours between coats.

dave
 
Walnut varies a lot, some dense and hard others with large pores that I have used the system on. The key to it is to saturate the wood then in a few minutes wipe it all off. Next wet sand with finish to get the slurry and leave it on to dry hard. Then sand that slurry in again with finish to drive it into the pores and allow that to dry. Depending on the wood two or three treatments like this will fill the pores. Once dry sand with finish again and wipe it off across the grain. The goal at this point is to fill the pores and have nothing on the surface. When you can look at a long angle and not see those dull patches you can start with very thin coats of finish to get what ever shine you like. I don’t use steel wool at all to get a fine finish. Here’s my rifle that I’m currently hunting with, the finish is at least ten years old and has seen plenty of weather. I believe the top coats are only three.
BD803678-D9E2-4041-B5CF-43990C7F7B8D by Oliver Sudden, on Flickr
A detail that I failed to point out and is important is when sanding in the finish to form the slurry is that small circles are done. This pushes the slurry into the pores from all directions. Do this in small overlapping areas.
 
Hi,
As long as you sanded the stock smooth after letting the slurry dry, you probably just need to add more coats of finish. It concerned me when you wrote you applied a coat, waited 15 minutes and then applied another coat. I may be misunderstanding you but after sanding the dried slurry smooth, and I hope you let it dry for 24 hours at least before sanding, then apply a coat of unthinned finish. I use a maroon Scotch Bright pad to apply the finish but do not try to sand the stock just use the pad to lay on the finish. I let it sit for no more than 15 minutes and then wipe all of the excess finish off the stock. Get it out of every nook and cranny. Then let dry for 24 hours before applying the next coat using the same procedure. Keep applying finish until you get sheen you want. It will take a few days or a week to do it. No need to sand between coats but you must let the previous coat dry for at least 24 hours before putting on the next coat. You will eventually have shiny and dull areas as the finish builds up. Just keep applying coats until you have the look you want and it is even. The secret is wipe off all excess finish and let dry for 24 hours between coats.

dave
I might have misunderstood the part about waiting for the finish to dry after wiping it off. :) Thank you for the reply!
 
First of all, thank you all who replied. Your pointers and tips are greatly appreciated and what makes this my go to forum.
Thank you @Phil Coffins. James offered to call me, even though I didn’t see the post till later he still called. He went over his method of making a slurry, letting it dry, making another slurry, letting it dry, then a third slurry and wiping it off. Using a circular motion while working the slurry. When I had all the slurry wiped off, I was supposed to look at the stock at an angle, reworking the dull spots and wiping them off. That’s where I had some problems:) I thought I got them all, I’ll blame my readers. They stick out when you apply the finish. I finally got them all.
Thank you Dave. I used, am still using, your method of applying finish, waiting not more than 15 minutes then wiping it off. Waiting at least 24 hours to reapply. It’s not quite where I want it but at least I am seeing progress.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_1452.jpeg
    IMG_1452.jpeg
    382.6 KB
  • IMG_1453.jpeg
    IMG_1453.jpeg
    261.5 KB
  • IMG_1454.jpeg
    IMG_1454.jpeg
    1.5 MB
Hi,
As long as you sanded the stock smooth after letting the slurry dry, you probably just need to add more coats of finish. It concerned me when you wrote you applied a coat, waited 15 minutes and then applied another coat. I may be misunderstanding you but after sanding the dried slurry smooth, and I hope you let it dry for 24 hours at least before sanding, then apply a coat of unthinned finish. I use a maroon Scotch Bright pad to apply the finish but do not try to sand the stock just use the pad to lay on the finish. I let it sit for no more than 15 minutes and then wipe all of the excess finish off the stock. Get it out of every nook and cranny. Then let dry for 24 hours before applying the next coat using the same procedure. Keep applying finish until you get sheen you want. It will take a few days or a week to do it. No need to sand between coats but you must let the previous coat dry for at least 24 hours before putting on the next coat. You will eventually have shiny and dull areas as the finish builds up. Just keep applying coats until you have the look you want and it is even. The secret is wipe off all excess finish and let dry for 24 hours between coats.

dave
Dave, I hate to bother you with this question, but is the maroon Scotch Brite considered very five grit? Reason I need to ask is Maroon Scotch Brite is not available locally but another brand is but is labeled more in textured finishes. Want to make sure I purchase the right one.
 
Dave, I hate to bother you with this question, but is the maroon Scotch Brite considered very five grit? Reason I need to ask is Maroon Scotch Brite is not available locally but another brand is but is labeled more in textured finishes. Want to make sure I purchase the right one.
Not Dave, but here are some 3M Scotch-Brite charts that I have posted before that may help you figure out equivalent grits with other brands of pads.
1660243677282.jpeg



1660243741112.jpeg
 
Not Dave, but here are some 3M Scotch-Brite charts that I have posted before that may help you figure out equivalent grits with other brands of pads.
1660243677282.jpeg



1660243741112.jpeg
SD, thank you for this. This explains a lot. I have printed it and will be in the shop tomorrow. If I had to gripe, I wish they would drop the so called color coding, which can be conflicting, and just list grit and description. But that’s me. Refinishing this rifle has taught me a lot already and has upped my refinishing skills for sure. I’m purchasing these to apply Sutherland Tung Oil Finish and have decided against 0000 steel wool.
Thanks again.
 
Last edited:
real good info on finishing stocks but unless you will hang the gun on a wall what is the sense in going so anal over a perfect finish on a stock like a 75K violin. if you go real hunting humping thru brush climbing up rocky ledges trees the stock will get beat up. sometimes I scratch my stocks cleaning the rifles lol
 
Back
Top