grcoffman104
Member
Have a chance of picking up a third gen auto , very cheep. Carred a whole lot shot rarely. My campadries have talked me into Cerakote as an option. If any of yall have taken that path, advice or pictures please!
Simple.What would you do to a scratched, dinged up 3rd gen alloy frame?
Drake....................
What would you do to a scratched, dinged up 3rd gen alloy frame?
I'd never do Cerakote to a stainless gun...... but the two frames I did (6904 and 915) were at best $300 guns.......... so $70 didn't seem out of line...
For my and others information.... how hard is it to remove Cerakote.
The blue - actually a type of Parkerizing - 3d gens can be restored to like new appearance for the cost of a couple of bottles of Birchfield Casey products from MidwayUSA or Brownells. Not difficult to do and it is much cheaper and quicker than sending them to S&W.
Professional metal finishers that specialize in guns don't use products that you buy from Brownells and wipe on with a paper towel so why should we? If only it was THAT easy.
Do-it-yourself products are for people that cant afford to do it the right way. If you cant afford to do it the right way, dont do it at all and chances are you cant afford the hobby.
Not trying to offend anyone, but its the truth.
If you are considering Duracoat for anything you should be aware that its Sherwin Williams industrial floor paint that sells under the name "Polane", its not made for guns, its just purchased in large qty and repackaged under a new name. Its also epoxy based paint which is for interior use only and has little to no UV protection so if you leave that gun in the sun too long, the coating will chalk up.
This "fingerprint" discussion is interesting when you apply it to the FTIR analysis we had an independent lab conduct on Cerakote™ H-Series. The lab's analysis found that Cerakote's "fingerprint" was nearly identical to the "fingerprint" of an epoxy coating. DuraCoat® tested similar to a urethane coating, because it is a urethane coating. That is in stark contrast to Cerakote™ testing most similar to an epoxy when they claim it is ceramic-based.
Drake....................
What would you do to a scratched, dinged up 3rd gen alloy frame?
I'd never do Cerakote to a stainless gun...... but the two frames I did (6904 and 915) were at best $300 guns.......... so $70 didn't seem out of line...
For my and others information.... how hard is it to remove Cerakote.
You can make it as difficult as you want - and charge as much as the traffic will bear - but the appropriate BC treatments will give you a finish identical to the factory finish. It really is THAT easy. Just because someone doesn't sell their services to the public doesn't mean they don't do some "professional" quality work.
I realize you're pretty new to this board, but if you hang around a while - or read some old posts - you'll find lots of photos of refinished weapons, both blue/black and bead blasted. Lots of posts on how to reproduce those finishes, too.
That's the real truth. There's lots to learn hanging around this place.
There is a discussion in another, older thread about this,
and they came to a simple solution...Bead Blasting.
Removes scratches, retains great looks, long-lasting.
This topic always seems to be beating a dead horse for me. Im just going to start encouraging people to hack their guns. In the end it make mine worth more anyways.
Cold blueing is not the same as hot bluing and doesnt hold up anywhere near as well. I could take a beat up gun and spray paint it with a $5 can of RustOleum and make it look amazing in pictures. How it holds up normal use is what matters. Thats why companies arent using consumer grade products.
There is a discussion in another, older thread about this,
and they came to a simple solution...Bead Blasting.
Removes scratches, retains great looks, long-lasting.
This topic always seems to be beating a dead horse for me. Im just going to start encouraging people to hack their guns. In the end it make mine worth more anyways.
To me, when it comes to shooter-grade pistols;
scratched, gouged, rusted, and otherwise beat to heck...
whatever finish one wants to go with, is just fine with me
It keeps a great tool working, and that's what we all want
After all, how many have had to refurb their Marlin 60 or Ruger 1022 receiver
with Krylon Flat Black & two clearcoats??
(Which is what some companies actually use)
Although, I prefer only having to refinish something ONCE...
because it had better last longer than me...
so using the right stuff is important...
like polishing the BLEEP out of something before refinishing
gives one a far better finished product, even with cold blues...
(although one could almost call my cold blue trick a lukewarm blue,
because it is far from cold when applied)
((but after learning how to Parkerize, won't be using cold blue again...
it is far easier than my cold blue trick!!))
Have a chance of picking up a third gen auto , very cheep. Carred a whole lot shot rarely. My campadries have talked me into Cerakote as an option. If any of yall have taken that path, advice or pictures please!