Thread: Yo, John!
View Single Post
  #8   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
Bill[_12_] Bill[_12_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jan 2017
Posts: 4,553
Default Yo, John!

wrote:
On Wed, 7 Mar 2018 20:04:08 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Wed, 07 Mar 2018 08:16:52 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Tue, 6 Mar 2018 20:13:37 -0500, Alex wrote:

I brought the M1A home today. The stock is a dry walnut - not a smooth
varnish like my shotguns and other rifles. What do you recommend to
preserve the wood? Tung oil seems to be popular. I have multiple
dehumidifiers in my safes so I don't want it to dry out and crack.
We never put anything on the stocks of our M-14s, but maybe the
armorer did. Looking around, as I'm
sure you have, I came across this:

Protecting/Preserving Walnut Stock
I recently became the proud owner of an M1A Standard with walnut stock
and I of course want to take
good care it. Right now it has a dull finish and I would like it a big
glossier, but not too much.
After hours and hours of using the search button I've seen a wide
variety of things people use to
protect/preserve the walnut stocks but I figure a poll will be the
best way to see which is the most
popular. I did send and receive a reply back from Springfield Armory
regarding this. Here was their
reply.

Troy,
Thank you for your purchase of our M1A model. We use linseed oil
rubbed into the stock here.

In the same thread there were several suggestions for tung oil.

I'd go with linseed oil. Lightly. Rubbed out after setting for 30 minutes or so.
The only time we did it was after we had a live fire drill on deck and
the M1s had salt spray on them. We did a detail strip of the weapon,
cleaned all the parts, light wipe with oil and we rubbed the stocks
with that linseed oil stuff I was talking about. The chief liked his
small arms looking sharp.


Did the wood still look good after a few months?


This is not a polished stock on a Weatherby, it will just be that dull
GI look that only gets polished by guys doing close order drill.



Some of the best looking weather protected picnic tables I ever saw, were
just Linseed oil coated. He said they did several coats with the linseed
oil thinned with mineral spirits. Was a state campground on the
Sacramento River at Colusa.