I also use BriWax. Excellent stuff. Semper Fi.I use Briwax. It's carnauba-based, so it gives a very hard finish. I guess it is available in the USA?
I also find that a waxed finish over oil gives added grip on my pistols.
I also use BriWax. Excellent stuff. Semper Fi.I use Briwax. It's carnauba-based, so it gives a very hard finish. I guess it is available in the USA?
I also find that a waxed finish over oil gives added grip on my pistols.
Four ounces. I've had my cute little can about 12 years now. About half full - I keep the same application cloth, use it over and over. That stuff dries hard and fast, lasts a long time.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!!
I’ll definitely use it sparingly!
Cute little can though….
Amazon doesn’t list whether a product is no longer made. If Amazon can’t get a product they just say that it’s unavailable.I'm a tad confused by the link to an unavailable product?
True. However, a quick web search showed me that the product ceased production in 2021 though.Amazon doesn’t list whether a product is no longer made. If Amazon can’t get a product they just say that it’s unavailable.
You got a Huge can!Four ounces. I've had my cute little can about 12 years now. About half full - I keep the same application cloth, use it over and over. That stuff dries hard and fast, lasts a long time.
And yes, the barrel and other shiny bits get waxed also - about three coats on the bottom of the barrel before pinning it in.
I bought some Feed n Wax-Wood is dead it doesn't need to be fed! Nonsense marketing...
Was wondering if you use an oil hand rubbed finish on a gun stock, then one day you decide to wax that stock, would adding an oil rub afterwards be a waste of time seeing that the wax would prevent an oil from getting into the wood?I got lucky and found a can of Johnsons paste wax at a mom and pop hardware store for $7 this spring. I can see the bottom on the can on my can at home. It has lasted over 20 years, this new can will out live me.
Anymore if you really like a product you better stock up as much as you'll ever use the way they discontinue products left and right anymore. About like Fromby's Tung Oil finish, Minwax bought them out and shut down the line.
I keep seeing where kit builders (Kibler) are using wax over what ever they finished the stock with. My question is why they do it? Surely the coats of whatever they used as a finish brought out the grain and Protected the wood from moisture. I realize the initial stain is not necessarily a moisture barrier, but don't we all add water protection and shine with products that only stain. Why then wax it? Does wax add more shine to an already smooth stock even though we have achieved the amount of luster we wanted whether from oil or poly? I ask because my recent Killer build is definitely protected from whatever wIthout using wax.
All that said I do Wax my completed cedar arrows, not for more Shine/luster bubut
Excellent product. Been using it for several years!As many of you know I have been around antique firearms for 83 years (my whole life) my family has been dealing in antiques of everything. Clothing to Weapons and everything in between.
They have used a number of oils and waxes to help with finger prints on fine finishes (as you know our finger oils can destroy old items), seems they were changing to different brands as time passed looking for a better product. And I have done the same, old wood is like old documents, (very fragile when handled). Most of your museums and antique dealers have been providing gloves to those wanting to hold a valuable piece.
We have found a quality product "Howards Feed~N~Wax", a wood polish & conditioner. It's made with orange oil and beeswax. I know of a half dozen collectors and at least that many museums have started using this product. Only time will tell just how good this wax really is ...
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That's true, about the marketing claim anyway, because it's the finish that needs to be "fed" from time to time, though the term I'd use is "refreshed". Oil finishes degrade over time with use and exposure. The only finish that doesn't is polyurethane, and I'd sooner give a gun away than put that on its stock.Wood is dead it doesn't need to be fed! Nonsense marketing...
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=howard's...55_10685730&tag=mh0b-20&ref=pd_sl_m8653ffre_eAmazon doesn’t list whether a product is no longer made. If Amazon can’t get a product they just say that it’s unavailable.
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