Johnny Tremain
Silversmith in training
Agree 5-7 coats of hand rubbed tung oil. Polished it gives a hard plastic like coating.
Maybe he bought the last one.I'm a tad confused by the link to an unavailable product?
Pricey, but quality often is.I use Renaissance wax on my firearms - both on the wood and the metal. Goes on easily, a very hard wax. Won't fingerprint, and protects all surfaces. It is used a good bit in museums and such.
Something a lot of people don't realize is that wax protects bare metal.....the wax does a great job of protecting the wood and metal.
Those stains would have happened back in the day and they would make a rifle look more authentic IMO.Many of us learned the hard way by taking out a newly finished rifle and then getting fouling water streaked across it when cleaning.
Yes, I can see that. ThanksWell, I think maybe your're reading too much into the word "finish". Finish maybe in terms of final appearance with respect to color and lustre. Wax isn't really an extra "final" step but just used to enhance the previous step. But oil is never really finished anyway. It needs to be renewed from time to time. Just this morning I spent some time applying another coat of BLO to a milsurp rifle (unmentionable here) made in 1933 because, to me, the wood stock was looking a little "dry". It spruced it up quite a bit. The only "finish" that's really "final" is some kind of polyurethane, and I really don't think you want that kind of finish on any 18th century firearm, do you?
Got up to look at a couple flintlocks that live on wall mounts. I use Ren Wax, lightly. I am seeing more of a luster than a shine.Yes, wax can add a little more protection, but I usually don't like how it looks. It has sort of a garish shine in my view, but I'm pretty particular.
Get the larger can...it's a more respectable size and easier to find on the shelf.I just bought some Renaissance wax, I didn’t think it was all that expensive…
Until I saw the container!?! It’s half the size of a wine cork!!
And a little goes a long way.Get the larger can...it's a more respectable size and easier to find on the shelf.
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