”Hardly what I would call a Restoration.
Plenty of 'BeadBlast & Blue' refinish jobs around.
Should have just done the strip and clean. Then kill the live rust and leave it at that unless you are going all in on a true Restoration. ……”.
“Every War souvenier can't be a gem as far as condition.
But beadblasting and hot salt bluing it did it no favors IMO.
It needed just some cleaning and conservation(for the rusting) more than anything else”.
It'll keep chemicals off of one's hands & not transfer hand acid to bare metal.
Both are good ideas, IMO.
Roger that. The worst thing you can do to a gun with a little rust or pitting is bead blast and blue. Bead blasting actually hides very few blemishes. I have had customer bring me blasted and blued guns and want me to make them right. The blasting adds hours of labor to a proper polish and blue.Hardly what I would call a Restoration.
Plenty of 'BeadBlast & Blue' refinish jobs around.
Should have just done the strip and clean. Then kill the live rust and leave it at that unless you are going all in on a true Restoration.
That involves hours+ of polishing. Mostly by hand but it must match what the Arsenal did at the time it was mfg'd. So it doesn't necessarily need to look first class custom. It has to look 'original'. That's where many Restorations fall flat. They get the polishing grit lines going in the wrong directions and often go too fine on the polishing.
Orig blue finish was likely a Rust Blue from that era. Hot Salt blue was just coming on the scene in the western world both Govt arsenals and the commercial trade.
I'm not sure what was going on inside Russia at the time (1938) but I suspect they stuck with a Rust Blue for a while.
Of course I'm talking about a Restoration which is what the titile of the video is.
The hardened parts were orig Straw color temper if I remember right. Flat springs either polished in the white or left spring temper color.
Those parts all came out an off color red in the hot salt blue which is predictable .
This one just got brought up to the same poor finish class as the heavily refinished, buffed & hot blued Nagants that were imported a few years ago. They sold cheaply w/a holster & cleaning rod usually,,around $100 IIRC at the time.
Every War souvenier can't be a gem as far as condition.
But beadblasting and hot salt bluing it did it no favors IMO.
It needed just some cleaning and conservation(for the rusting) more than anything else.