Cut a bunch of patches.. Threw my knife & hawk and shot my longbow..
Thank you!Your horn work is downright beautiful
I like the look of the lock.Slow Kentuckyish rebuild day.
Stripped and green scrubby padded the stock Traditions lock.
All steel parts will retain a scrubby pad finish and allowed turn on their own. Considering having the brass trigger guard plated a matte silver to match the rest of the rifle. Not dig'in the idea of mixing raw steel and brass
Cut the ramrod channel deeper. Looks mo betta. Need to drill and pin new steel pipes once they arrive from TOW.
Down to the final color choices. Trying to decide what works best with raw steel.
Pics of the wrinkled finish?Here's a Warning: Made the mistake of leaving an H.E. Leman trade rifle (GRRW reproduction) in a hot car for an hour. In one hour, the heat wrinkled the finish on the rifle to the point of now having to lightly sand off the original finish at the damaged locations with 400 grit wet/dry sandpaper. Once cleaned up I'll go over it with 600 grit before reapplying the finish again. Seems somedays. you should just stay in bed.
Already knocked down, now ready for final 600 grit sanding.Pics of the wrinkled finish?
Hope you get it fixed up.Here's a Warning: Made the mistake of leaving an H.E. Leman trade rifle (GRRW reproduction) in a hot car for an hour. In one hour, the heat wrinkled the finish on the rifle to the point of now having to lightly sand off the original finish at the damaged locations with 400 grit wet/dry sandpaper. Once cleaned up I'll go over it with 600 grit before reapplying the finish again. Seems somedays. you should just stay in bed.
Thank you, if I can't make it look right, I'll make a trip to Roosevelt UT to see Carl Walker, he built the gun originally in 1973.Hope you get it fixed up.
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