thisistheway
Well-known member
I have several parts in my collection now that have varying degrees of rust, from "smooth orange patina" to "crusty." I've read a lot of commentary on what not to do to metal that would adulterate it from a collector's standpoint (hit anything original with serious abrasives, cold blue, even boiling seems controversial). On the flipside, I have heard suggestions such as dry #0000 steel wool, WD-40 or Flitz on a rag and elbow grease, and of course "don't touch it" as means for removing surface corrosion to a point where you can then wipe on some Ballistol/preferred anti-rust agent and preserve what is left of the original finish.
Similarly, on the topic of preserving wood stocks, there is consensus on plenty of things you obviously should not do (sanding, stripping, carving a crude deer head in the side), but I've seen little in terms of what you should. Is wiping on some plain BLO to replenish the surface a sin? Perhaps more complicated, what if you have a stock with severely raised grain (particularly of the unfinished late war vintage) from moisture exposure, resulting in a dried out, uneven surface that is likely splinter and crack-prone? Is there an accepted method for protecting the wood from further degradation?
Obviously, I'm sure there are differences in opinion regarding what is good, what is ok, and what is ruinous. There's a reason "restoration" appears in quotation marks so frequently here. I am curious, though, if there's some degree of consensus around things you can or should do to protect these increasingly quite valuable investments. How do you care for and protect yours? And for the advanced collectors here, when evaluating a serious matching acquisition, how have you most often seen well-meaning people inadvertently destroy the value of a rifle?
Similarly, on the topic of preserving wood stocks, there is consensus on plenty of things you obviously should not do (sanding, stripping, carving a crude deer head in the side), but I've seen little in terms of what you should. Is wiping on some plain BLO to replenish the surface a sin? Perhaps more complicated, what if you have a stock with severely raised grain (particularly of the unfinished late war vintage) from moisture exposure, resulting in a dried out, uneven surface that is likely splinter and crack-prone? Is there an accepted method for protecting the wood from further degradation?
Obviously, I'm sure there are differences in opinion regarding what is good, what is ok, and what is ruinous. There's a reason "restoration" appears in quotation marks so frequently here. I am curious, though, if there's some degree of consensus around things you can or should do to protect these increasingly quite valuable investments. How do you care for and protect yours? And for the advanced collectors here, when evaluating a serious matching acquisition, how have you most often seen well-meaning people inadvertently destroy the value of a rifle?