Cold bluing

a_finelli

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I'm thinking of restoring the finish on an old rifle this winter since I'll. Be getting a new rifle by next session. Is there a product you recommend more than another? Birchwood casey? Brownells? Some other brand? Thanks for the help, Anthony

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Whichever product you get, the way I do it is rub in the blue and then rub oil into the surface with your hands. Finally, take a towel and rub the surface with it. I have gotten amazing results doing it that way.
 
I've done a few old single barrel shotguns with Birchwood Casey cold blue and got some surprisingly good results. Key is prep prep prep ( polishing) then degrease with acetone 2 or 3 times. Then apply bluing in 3 applications, washing, drying and degreasing parts between applications. Lastly wash parts again to stop chem reaction and buff out with 0000 steel wool and oil. even a fingerprint will screw it up so getting the steel free from all oil is important.
 
After through decreasing, warming the steel with a heat gun, or blow dryer seems to make the cold bluing process work better. It doesn't need to be hot.
 
I agree with TAC, warming the steel makes a big difference. Seems to make it blue faster, and probably deeper, because when I did heat the parts the cold blueing lasted a lot longer and looked better.
 
Have a couple to re-do, interesting thread. Following this subject in the past, it seemed that rust blue would be the way to go. How do the guns hold up with the cold blue that some recommend. Cold bluing would seem to be easier. Roughly, how many coats will do a gun nicely. How do you degrease the guns? Larry
 
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