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- Dec 21, 2016
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Very nice work! Definitely looks better with the restain
Thanks! It actually wasn't a restain. The color becomes more vibrant as the oil is built up on the surface and polished!Very nice work! Definitely looks better with the restain
I get better at it the more I do it, that's for sure! I finished last night, oiled the checkering, and just sat there holding it for a while. It definitely isn't a London's best, but I am very excited to finally have a reasonable facsimile of a big bore with English contours! I would love a real antique Rigby someday with some history, but for now, I am going to use this to get some game!Congrats! It looks like a fine vintage magazine rifle. The checkering turned out great.
@ChrisG It may not be a Rigby with some history.I get better at it the more I do it, that's for sure! I finished last night, oiled the checkering, and just sat there holding it for a while. It definitely isn't a London's best, but I am very excited to finally have a reasonable facsimile of a big bore with English contours! I would love a real antique Rigby someday with some history, but for now, I am going to use this to get some game!
... plus, it isn't as disheartening when I scratch it because I know how to repair it!@ChrisG It may not be a Rigby with some history.
To me it is better. YOU did the work and made what You wanted. Now you can make your own history with it and be able to tell that history first hand. Doing something yourself gives more satisfaction than owning something someone else has made memorable things with.
You have done a great job now go and make your own history with that lovely rifle then tell the kids and grandchildren about YOUR adventures.
Bob
Thank you! It's the end of bear season here, so I might just have to knock a couple of coyotes down with it just so it gets some useBeautiful rifle enjoy!
I read somewhere that this TIG rod takes bluingFactories hot blue their parts using a caustic nitrate bath at around 300°F. I don't have that setup ( it is wayyy too dangerous and caustic for a "home hobby"). But it does blue almost any ferrous metal. I am using the rust blue method which is a much higher end finish on gunmetal, but it can be finicky. My issue is that I hacked the bolt handle off the Whitworth and TIG welded on a turned bolt knob... likely of different metal, and it isn't taking a blue. I did about 12 coats on it and, while it will get a darker tint, it rubs right off with your fingers after a few bolt cycles.