Just adopted a homely 34-1

Odessaman

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This followed me home from from a local pawn shop yesterday. The pawnbroker made me a deal I couldn't pass up, after I spent 20 minutes looking it over and speculating whether it was salvageable or not. As bad as the finish (or lack thereof) looks, the gun is amazingly tight and sound mechanically. The crane mates up tightly to the frame and it doesn't appear that the sideplate's been removed (or at least, it's not boogered up.) The bore is sharp and clean, and there's no pitting anywhere on the gun, to my surprise.

Once I get it to the range, I'll determine whether to use it as practice for home bluing or invest in a refinish by Ford's, which is just an hour north of me.
 

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Whatever course you take, I think it will shape up nicely.
 
Makes you really wonder about the history of a piece when you see one with that much bluing loss. It appears to have been well "loved". I'd bet it is a great shooter.
 
You might try investigating one of the bake-on finishes. My brother recently competed a refinish on an old Marlin .22 rifle. The original finish was in similar condition to your revolver. It came out real nice. It is sort of a satin black that is almost scratch and wear proof. It comes in a spray can and he bought it from Brownells. Much better than cold blue.
 
Nice old gun with lots of personality!.. Out here in West TX. with the low humidity I'd leave it like it is but in Fl. it might need some protection against rust. It'd probably be ok like it is if you wiped it down with a very light coat of oil or maybe a silicone cloth before you put it away.
 
If that gun shoots, I would send it back to Springfield and have it refinished. It has no sentimental value to you as-is and there is almost no original finish remaining, so you can't "hurt" it. People on this forum sometimes rant and rave about refinishing revolvers like it is some sort of crime against nature. When I was a young fellow, sending them back for tune-ups and refinishing was pretty common. That one needs to make the trip if it's a good shooter. :)
 
I can ballpark what Ford's will charge for refinishing. I would have them do Deluxe Bluing (not the Master Bluing) and re-case color the hammer and trigger. Does anyone have an idea what the factory would charge for the same work, assuming no mechanical repairs are needed?
 
I vote for factory nickel. With a nice set of vintage stags and a polished aluminum Tyler T. Now THAT would be DOKE!!
 
I need to start looking around for some of these deals on old revolvers I want to start a collection of revolvers.
 
Now that's an "experienced" gun. If you do send it off to Ford's it would certainly be interesting to see "before" and "after" photos.

To tell the truth that gun is more interesting than the usual safe queens.
 
It has some great charterer to it. The grips look real good compared to the metal. Nice find!
 
Now that is a piece of machinery! Ask some shooting buddies over and have it laying on a table as is. See what reaction you get. Then re-finish, re-blue, polish, and shine.
Try another group and see what they say, if they say anything at all. Probably like an '82 Corvette, a yawner.
 
I finally got around to this little project. A guy sold me some ammo and threw in a bottle of Brownell's Oxpho Blue Cream as a "free bonus," so I figured I'd give it a try. I must say, I'm very happy with the results. I wasn't looking to turn this into a show piece, just give the metal a little protection and make it a little less homely. I purposely stopped with two applications, polishing with OOOO steel wool between coats. Then, I soaked all the parts in a jar of motor oil for a few hours and did a final polish with a soft rag. The high spots, backstrap and trigger guard came out with a nice patina that I wasn't able to capture with my cheap digital camera. Here are the "after" shots:
 

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