noah.c.hardy
Member
I'm thinking to buy a set of ahrends retro banana's in maple with no finish. As a poor college student I am considering applying the tung oils finish on my own and saving the $20. Is this a bad idea?
I got unfinished in maple and Moradillo, oiled them myself, and they turned out fantastic! I cannot see how you can go wrong doing them yourself, it just takes patience to get all the coats on and looking good. (5 minutes of rubbing and 24 hours of drying per coat). The results are amazing though.
I got unfinished in maple and Moradillo, oiled them myself, and they turned out fantastic! I cannot see how you can go wrong doing them yourself, it just takes patience to get all the coats on and looking good. (5 minutes of rubbing and 24 hours of drying per coat). The results are amazing though.
Good luck. I received Ahrends grips via Brownells for my 686 this week. The cocobolo wood has the color and figuring of a chocolate bar. The grips didn't fit the gun without some sanding and filing. And a piece of wood broke off the bottom...I've glued it back on and it looks OK now. I also have managed to put them on the gun, but I still have a gap at the front.![]()
While Brownells is a very good company, when you are dealing with wood you need to see a picture of what you are getting. I have purchased several grips from ebay dealer gripseller without any problems. The picture you see is what you get. All mine have fit without a problem.
My "hold " on a revolver is called a "loose hold" which means I don't choke the s*^t out of the grip frame! This dictates I use a set of grips that don't slip in your hands under recoil which means most of my shooters wear rubbers.
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I have found that the Ahrends grips are the ONLY wood grips I can shoot well with. I would contribute this to their finish, what ever it may be? The 610 in the pic is wearing Altmount grips and these have a high polished finish which means I must adjust my hold after each shot.
jcelect SWCA #LM723