First time I ever pressure washed a gun, but we had a plan, ...and it worked well.
The hand guards were walnut, and the stock was a dried out fence post, of a yet to be determined wood.
We're doing this Remington first, then the Winchester, The Rem didn't group as well as the Win at the range. After a cleaning, the test fire at the range, and a pressure washer stuffed into the barrel, it knocked all kinds of garbage loose from the bore. More scrubbing produced black patches, and showed some deep lands and grooves with some mild pitting. Some more "shoot and clean" will be in order after it's back together.
Grendl, when we got the worst of the finish off, the stock was in about the same shape as yours. The wood underneath is as dry as a popcorn fart. W55 is cleaning the rest of the finish off with a tile cutter blade for a scrape. When he's done we'll give it a lacquer thinner scrub with steel wool.
There's a lot of grain separation from drying out, so we'll try sanding in a slurry of minwax sanding sealer. The sealer and sawdust will fill the checks, then we'll let it dry and rub it down with 0000 steel wool, before it gets a first coat of BLO.
This stock is going to be the test subject, if it turns out good, the Win stock will look much better. If "he" screws it up, I have a walnut replacement lined up at Boyds.
The hand guards were walnut, and the stock was a dried out fence post, of a yet to be determined wood.We're doing this Remington first, then the Winchester, The Rem didn't group as well as the Win at the range. After a cleaning, the test fire at the range, and a pressure washer stuffed into the barrel, it knocked all kinds of garbage loose from the bore. More scrubbing produced black patches, and showed some deep lands and grooves with some mild pitting. Some more "shoot and clean" will be in order after it's back together.
Grendl, when we got the worst of the finish off, the stock was in about the same shape as yours. The wood underneath is as dry as a popcorn fart. W55 is cleaning the rest of the finish off with a tile cutter blade for a scrape. When he's done we'll give it a lacquer thinner scrub with steel wool.
There's a lot of grain separation from drying out, so we'll try sanding in a slurry of minwax sanding sealer. The sealer and sawdust will fill the checks, then we'll let it dry and rub it down with 0000 steel wool, before it gets a first coat of BLO.
This stock is going to be the test subject, if it turns out good, the Win stock will look much better. If "he" screws it up, I have a walnut replacement lined up at Boyds.


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