You do a great job cleaning and polishing. I merely give them a wipe with a rag. Maybe I should send some to you! What do you charge for detailing an N frame?
Kevin
Wow! How did you acquire such a gem? I've been coveting a 520!
Kenny-Do what I do. Go shoot a few and then start the process over. I just shot my 13-3 for the first time yesterday. It was pristine when I started. I felt badly for the first 6 rounds. I put 50 through it and I'll clean it up again tonight and do another one.
Be very careful using the Birchwood lead removal cloth, it's meant for stainless or nickel plated guns. Hard rubbing with this cloth on blued guns can remove bluing. Read the directions on the back of the packaging.
Was my exact thought.Be very careful using the Birchwood lead removal cloth, it's meant for stainless or nickel plated guns. Hard rubbing with this cloth on blued guns can remove bluing. Read the directions on the back of the packaging.
Thanks Kevin. They clean up real easy.
First I wipe them down with a Birchwood lead removal cloth, lightly apply Flitz with my finger, wipe off the Flitz with a microfiber cloth and then apply Renaissance wax with my finger and wipe it off with another microfiber cloth.
TheFlitz is what really brings out the shine.
Thanks for the cleaning tip. I'm a big fan of Ren Wax but I never would have thought to use a mild abrasive polish on a blued revolver. I had to give it a try and the most likely candidate in the safe was a holster worn post war M&P that cost me about what the pre war magna's are worth. The before/after pictures really don't show how much the appearance was improved. You've converted me.