Max242
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- Joined
- Dec 3, 2024
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Your referring to blending in the repair to the effected spot? What kit do you recommend? ThanksSure.
It's a Band-Aid, but you might use it in the future for other blue loss or the odd small ding.
Completely de-grease, clean and dry, heated up with a hairdryer… maybe do it in the sun too, then add blue.
Clean and dry again, heat up, add blue..
Do this five or six times… or as many as it takes until there is no change.
That will be about as good as it gets. Not perfect but way better than missing Blue, which might lead to Rust.
Excellent!!! EasyHad a friend who had a touchup bluing pen. Applied 4 coats. Cleaned and polished with a new dollar bill between each coat. Just enough hard texture. I think it turned out darn well.
It came out outstanding. You guys did a really nice job. The key ingredient is "polishing and reapplying" which helps blend the metal to the surrounding surfaces. To do this without using chemical agents deepens the blue color with each application.Had a friend who had a touchup bluing pen. Applied 4 coats. Cleaned and polished with a new dollar bill between each coat. Just enough hard texture. I think it turned out darn well.
My buddy said he's had the pen a year or so, stored in his cleaning box. No harm giving it a try. I was happy with the outcome. I may try a few more coats. As I look at a close up of the photos, I can see the seams. But maybe I am looking to close.It came out outstanding. You guys did a really nice job. The key ingredient is "polishing and reapplying" which helps blend the metal to the surrounding surfaces. To do this without using chemical agents deepens the blue color with each application.
By the way, I use Super Blue as my go-to. I think it most closely resembles the original S and W color which is a deep, dark blue-black. I suspect the super Blue chemical is what is inside the Presto Pen. I don't like the pens because they have a tenancy to dry out.
To be truthful, after the 4 coats I very lightly cleaned/polished the entire revolver with Flitz. That made the whole revolver pop big time.I had no idea that level of do it yourself bluing existed.
I was going to say: send it to the mother ship.
That's still probably what I'd do.
I don't mind old stuff. I just don't like stuff that looks old.
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I don't use steel wool any longer either because it has a film of oil on it. ...
you can get oil free 0000 steel wool from a woodworking supply house. Liberon and Briwax are good.