UncleEd
Member
If as some suspect blood or other matter is inside, usually that causes rust from body salts. Does the gun cycle OK. With a lot
of rust I would think not.
of rust I would think not.
I am trying the baking soda for the grips right now, I will try something else if the stink lingers. .....
If you have Kuhnhausen's "The S&W Revolvers, A Shop Manual", in the section on disassembly, page 38, it describes how to use a drill press to maintain pressure on the screw to prevent the blade from jumping out of the slot.
So now that it's separated from the stocks, does the revolver still stink? If not, there's no hurry on any further disassembly.
Agreed, why risk buggering up the screws. Get you a can of Brake Cleaner, it should come with a straw, and spray thoroughly through the grip frame. This will clean it well. Then drop some oil in same location. Clean grips separately. If this doesn't work, do the next step and remove side plate. Let's get this done, we're coming up on a second page now!![]()
While it may at first seem a strange question; I wonder if the smell is apparent to others, or just you ?
Not trying to question your sense of smell, nor your veracity; but my elder father-in-law lost all sense of smell, as well as the ability to taste any but the strongest foods for awhile.
Stayed in that same condition for quite a while and when the sense of smell returned it was bizarre for a month or so. He noted instead of a neutral / blank smell it was the smell of spinning tires, faint, but definite.....Finally cleared on it's own, but his sense of taste remained poor.
Not nearly as interesting as your adventures with a S&W, and certainly I, like all the rest of us subscribing to this thread, want there to be something tangible inside that gun.
Earlier I seem to recall there was mention that metal could retain no smell. You only have to smell of a zinc bucket,a brass plumbing fixture, a handful of pennies, or a piece of pure copper to belie that opinion.