Coke refinish

Patrick L

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As promised, here is the report on my refinish of the previously refinished Cokes.

I really do love the feel of these, and since they had previously been refinished by Bubba, I didn't think I was really hurting anything, and I ended up with something I will enjoy on the new 27-2 nickel long tom once the amendment to my permit goes through. As for value, I almost never let that dictate my actions. I guess my heirs will curse me out when I'm gone, but I suspect I'll die happy.

The grips had a heavy, glossy varnish on them, that had a few runs in it, plus a lot of chips in the finish. I am really a scraper at heart, and that Boker pocket knife takes a REAL sharp edge. I used the pen blade and a single edge razor blade to scrape most of the finish off dry
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I then used some stripper to pull the remaining finish out of the wood, along with more scraping. I find a good clean scraping requires a lot less sanding. I don't like to sand as you tend to round off or flatten things if you're not real careful
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I then did sand just a bit. VERY slight with 100 grit to clean up some deep scratches, then 320, 400, and 600. I recut some of the flattened diamonds with a single line checkering tool and a veiner. I didn;t cut too much, as I didn't want to overdo things.

I then did about three coats (just a few drops per coat) of pure Tung oil, hand rubbed until the friction was HOT to soak the oil in. Between coats, I buff the flats LIGHTLY with bronze wool. Then like two drops brushed into the checkering with a baby toothbrush.

I think they look pretty good

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I like the slightly dull finish the tung oil gives. As I use them, they will take on a bit more lustre. In a few weeks, after the oil has really cured, I will give them a coat of wax, which will also add to the long term lustre.

I didn't think to take a picture of them before I started the project, so I looked quick. The only picture I can find is this one where they're on my 6 inch 27-2

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So what do you think!
 
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Outstanding job!

The talents of some of the members of this forum never cease to amaze me—from every visual art to writing, music, wood, leather and metal craft. I don't think there is a single creative talent I have not seen well practiced by our members.
 
Hopes 100% pure tung oil. My can literally dates from the 1970s, and I probably still have 2/3 of a can. You don't use much!

Thanks for the kind remarks!
 
Good job! I am glad that they cleaned up so easily for you. We are forever hearing stories of folks that had to splice in wood to fix chips or having to try and fill in cracks...yours like mighty fine.
 
Very nice job - those grips look beautiful!:cool:

I also had a set of cokes that received a similar treatment (stripping a thick varnish that someone had applied, very light sanding and a light coat or two of Tung Oil). But I have no checkering tools or skills so some of the points are still a bit rounded. However, with all that in mind, they are nice enough to look good, but not too good that I don't shoot with them.





... the above also had some prior repairs that you can see if you look closely.
 
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