noahmercy
Blackhawk
So I convinced my mom to bid on a NIB Oglesby-tuned New Vaquero 45 Colt a while back during a live auction of a friend's estate sale. She won, and got a fantastic deal on a 4 5/8" polished stainless pistol with a slick action. I loaded up some anti-bruin loads for it with book max (for Colt & clones...don't worry, I wouldn't blow up my mother!) charges of Unique and my hand-cast and tempered 260 grain flat point slugs so she had something to carry up in the Big Horn Mountains in case she ran into a grumpy Yogi or unreasonable mama moose.
She took it to the range and it shot great! Then she put it in a new nylon Uncle Mike's holster my step dad had gotten her, and stuck it in the safe...for several years. I believe UM should put a label on every package that says, "All Uncle Mike's holsters ship from the factory with corrosive moisture in the foam at no extra cost to you!" SMH...
So I removed the orange dust from the top of the barrel as best I could, then used 4-ought steel wool and Ballistol to get it to clean metal, but there is still some discoloration. I want to return it to as close to factory as possible.
I have a good buffing wheel for my bench grinder, and several grades of polishing compound sticks. The question is does anyone know what grit (color, name, whatever) compound will get me closest to the factory finish? I am lucky in that it is only the barrel I need to deal with, and the cloudiness is not over the lettering, so no worries about "over-polishing" and rounding edges or obscuring factory stampings. I just have to remove the ejector rod/housing, and I have complete access to the affected area.
Thanks, guys!
(UPDATE) Edited to reflect that #1, I got it almost perfect with green polishing compound and a cloth wheel, and #2 I changed my description of the firearm to avoid upsetting the terminology nazis.
She took it to the range and it shot great! Then she put it in a new nylon Uncle Mike's holster my step dad had gotten her, and stuck it in the safe...for several years. I believe UM should put a label on every package that says, "All Uncle Mike's holsters ship from the factory with corrosive moisture in the foam at no extra cost to you!" SMH...
So I removed the orange dust from the top of the barrel as best I could, then used 4-ought steel wool and Ballistol to get it to clean metal, but there is still some discoloration. I want to return it to as close to factory as possible.
I have a good buffing wheel for my bench grinder, and several grades of polishing compound sticks. The question is does anyone know what grit (color, name, whatever) compound will get me closest to the factory finish? I am lucky in that it is only the barrel I need to deal with, and the cloudiness is not over the lettering, so no worries about "over-polishing" and rounding edges or obscuring factory stampings. I just have to remove the ejector rod/housing, and I have complete access to the affected area.
Thanks, guys!
(UPDATE) Edited to reflect that #1, I got it almost perfect with green polishing compound and a cloth wheel, and #2 I changed my description of the firearm to avoid upsetting the terminology nazis.
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