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#1
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Yo, John!
On Thu, 08 Mar 2018 13:02:46 -0500, John H.
wrote: On Wed, 7 Mar 2018 20:02:48 -0500, Alex wrote: 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. I did read a lot of posts including the one you quoted here. I also read in a post that linseed oil has to "cure" for 30 days?? Not sure what that's all about. Initially I will take the gun apart and treat the wood with whatever I end up buying. For maintenance applications do you think there could be any harm to the metal with either of these oils? It will be difficult to not have any touch the metal. I wouldn't be oiling it more than about once a year, and I'd take it all apart then. No, I don't think a bit of linseed oil will hurt anything, but I'd wipe it off and put a light coat of gun oil on the metal. Yup you really want to wipe off all of the stock oil you can.. The stuff that soaks into the wood is all that is helping you anyway and we certainly did not want brown smudges on our "whites". |
#2
posted to rec.boats
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Yo, John!
Keyser Soze wrote:
wrote: On Thu, 08 Mar 2018 13:02:46 -0500, John H. wrote: On Wed, 7 Mar 2018 20:02:48 -0500, Alex wrote: 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. I did read a lot of posts including the one you quoted here. I also read in a post that linseed oil has to "cure" for 30 days?? Not sure what that's all about. Initially I will take the gun apart and treat the wood with whatever I end up buying. For maintenance applications do you think there could be any harm to the metal with either of these oils? It will be difficult to not have any touch the metal. I wouldn't be oiling it more than about once a year, and I'd take it all apart then. No, I don't think a bit of linseed oil will hurt anything, but I'd wipe it off and put a light coat of gun oil on the metal. Yup you really want to wipe off all of the stock oil you can.. The stuff that soaks into the wood is all that is helping you anyway and we certainly did not want brown smudges on our "whites". I use a product called “Lin-Speed” on non-varnished wood stocks. It is some sort of proprietary linseed oil...goes on with the fingers. Oiling varnished or poly-coated wood seems like a waste of time and effort. No kidding. No one asked you. |
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