So I’m in the middle of a restoration of a Savage 87A and I’m getting ready to start the stock.
I’ve grown up just rubbing linseed oil into raw wood until the desired finish is reached, then wax and buffing.
Now being in a much hotter, and much dryer area, what’s everyone’s thoughts on linseed oil vs tru oil vs stain and seal?
I know linseed can get sticky when exposed to extreme heat, and I’ve never worked with tru oil.
Thanks in advance.
Gun Stock refinishing
- Kingjoey
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Re: Gun Stock refinishing
I use teak oil cut with some xylene
- Suck My Glock
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Re: Gun Stock refinishing
In my limited experience using linseed oil, UNDAMAGED wood isn't really capable of of soaking up too much to where it leaches out in the heat. BUT,...I once had an M1 Garand that had a hairline crack in the stock; not so bad that it needed to be replaced, but was noticeable. At some point, either the arsenal depot or some previous owner had given the stock a newer coat of linseed oil. I fell upon hard times and held a garage sale back then, where (among other things) I had the Garand out on a table in the blazing sun for most of the day. As that stock baked in the summer sunlight, linseed oil continued all day to slowly ooze from the crack. Every 20 minutes or so, I'd have to take a Kleenex or paper towel and dab at the oil beading up. It never really stopped until I brought the gun out of the sun.
By contrast, back in 1989 when the Mosin-Nagants first arrived here after the Dole Amendment lifting the ban on surplus rifles getting imported, I got my hands on a Finnish captured and rebarrelled M91/30 that had been in deep cosmoline packing for decades. After using gasoline to get all the gelatinous goo dissolved, and then soaking the stock in the bathtub for 24 hours to help the dings and dents in the wood to raise and fill out, I let the stock dry out in our summer heat for 3 days, then used simple spray can polyurethane from Home Depot to seal it. The texture wasn't as glass smooth as brush-applied urethane can be, but was actually a bonus in my opinion, because it made gripping the rifle more secure and the slightly matte gloss wasn't as out-of-place looking as the higher gloss urethane would have been. I shot the living crap out of that Nagant over the next 20 years, and that simple spray on polyurethane finish was durable as all Hell and looked as good as it had when I first applied it.
By contrast, back in 1989 when the Mosin-Nagants first arrived here after the Dole Amendment lifting the ban on surplus rifles getting imported, I got my hands on a Finnish captured and rebarrelled M91/30 that had been in deep cosmoline packing for decades. After using gasoline to get all the gelatinous goo dissolved, and then soaking the stock in the bathtub for 24 hours to help the dings and dents in the wood to raise and fill out, I let the stock dry out in our summer heat for 3 days, then used simple spray can polyurethane from Home Depot to seal it. The texture wasn't as glass smooth as brush-applied urethane can be, but was actually a bonus in my opinion, because it made gripping the rifle more secure and the slightly matte gloss wasn't as out-of-place looking as the higher gloss urethane would have been. I shot the living crap out of that Nagant over the next 20 years, and that simple spray on polyurethane finish was durable as all Hell and looked as good as it had when I first applied it.
- stomp442
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Re: Gun Stock refinishing
Brownells pro custom gun oil is the way to go. Very nice finish thats easy to apply. Buff to your desired finish with rottenstone or leave glossy.
- RandyTF
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Re: Gun Stock refinishing
Polyurathane is a very durable finish. It is not maybe as traditional for gun stocks as Truoil but, in my experience, polyurathane holds up better. For 6 or 7 years, I had a business making pistol grips from mostly exotic wood and the majority of them I finished with polyurathane. It is available in mat, semi gloss and gloss. I used the semigloss and never had a complaint. I've done some restorations also and have used Truoil on a few. They are showing more blemishes than the guns I finished in polyurathane.
- shorepatrol
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Re: Gun Stock refinishing
My experience as well. I use more truoil just because I like the process of rubbing it in with my fingers and it smells amazing.RandyTF wrote: ↑July 18th, 2023, 2:38 pm Polyurathane is a very durable finish. It is not maybe as traditional for gun stocks as Truoil but, in my experience, polyurathane holds up better. For 6 or 7 years, I had a business making pistol grips from mostly exotic wood and the majority of them I finished with polyurathane. It is available in mat, semi gloss and gloss. I used the semigloss and never had a complaint. I've done some restorations also and have used Truoil on a few. They are showing more blemishes than the guns I finished in polyurathane.
- stomp442
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Re: Gun Stock refinishing
Here is one I finished up not too long ago. This has got about 30 coats of pro custom gun oil and buffed with rottenstone to a satin finish. The first few coats I added some bone black to the finish to fill the pores of the grain and make it pop.
- Rebelpvtj
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Re: Gun Stock refinishing
I appreciate all the feed back. I ended up using boiled linseed oil. 5 very light coats with about a day in between, finished with several paste wax layers. My nephew decided he wanted the rifle and wanted “old school, just like when Grandpa bought it.”