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06-09-2012 12:19 PM
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I am sure the experts will chime in but my novice experience would say mineral spirits and 0000 steel wool would do the trick. Or perhaps 0000 steel wool alone. If it has been varnished it looks light and patchy.
Nice looking Lithgow
.
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I think you would have been better to leave it as it was, but I understand the motivation. The problem is that you will never achieve a new like finish on the wood because it is old and deeply impregnated with oil. If you do something to "lighten it up", like for instance hit it with paint stripper, you will lighten 90% of it, and be left with tell tails around all exposed end grain (bands, butt socket etc). They all look refinished when you lighten them up, by any means. A while ago I had a rifle that looked much like your that had a clapped barrel, I converted it to .22lr with some parts I had, and to freshen the stock up I gave it a very light scrub with fine steel wool soaked in linseed oil
, right or wrong it looked fresher but relatively unmolested. Any attempt to lighten the timber, without the rifle looking refinished is in my opinion destined to fail.
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Any attempt to lighten the timber, without the rifle looking refinished is in my opinion destined to fail.
I agree, I was hoping it would look better after a light clean up. I'm committed now to finish this, so I well strip this varnish or what ever it is off and go from there.
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If it's varnish, you probably need to strip it with a correct chemical stripper made for removing varnish. Then just RLO as tbonesmith
suggests. I use grocery store clear ammonia for grungy, oil soaked woodwork but it won't strip varnish. Use a Scotchbrite plastic scrubby pad and apply the ammonia with the sponge side and just work it a bit with the scrubby side going with the grain. Then rinse with cool water, dry it out real well in the sun and apply the linseed with fine steel wool. The ammonia will remove the old grime and dirt and redistribute the original remaining oil. The rinse will pop up little dings and dents where the grain isn't broken and the steel wool will will knock down raised grain without hurting the character or markings. Adding a few more coats of RLO will bring it right back to how it was before less the grunge.
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Here's an example of what can be done using the ammonia method. This rifle had ugly polyurethane gooped on and I had to strip with chemical stripper and then use the ammonia method and RLO. I never touched it with sandpaper although it may have been sanded before I got it.
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The Following 4 Members Say Thank You to Brian Dick For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
I just read the following article on line regarding refinishing a Lithgow
SMLE. Take a look, it might be of interest to you.
No.1 MkIII SMLE
I might also add that I too recently purchased a war dated Lithgow, mine is a 1944; hope to have it in my hands soon.
Good luck.
Last edited by gbalke; 06-30-2012 at 02:01 PM.
Gary
A former Cheesehead now living in St. Louis
GO PACKERS!!
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Thank You to gbalke For This Useful Post:
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Advisory Panel
I started reading that article and clicked out of it as soon as i saw the Easy Off oven cleaner. It's a lazy man method of cleaning wood and does more harm than good, especially to Coachwood and other woods that didn't start life as the hardest, densest gunstock wood anyhow. It's got lye in it and it'll turn the wood grey if left on too long and damage it beyond repair so be forewarned. I can't even imagine what it would do to Queensland maple which is a bit softer than coachwood. I've seen so many rifles ruined using that stuff. Don't do it!!
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Thank You to Brian Dick For This Useful Post:
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I started reading that article and clicked out of it as soon as i saw the Easy Off oven cleaner. It's a lazy man method of cleaning wood and does more harm than good, especially to Coachwood and other woods that didn't start life as the hardest, densest gunstock wood anyhow. It's got lye in it and it'll turn the wood grey if left on too long and damage it beyond repair so be forewarned. I can't even imagine what it would do to Queensland maple which is a bit softer than coachwood. I've seen so many rifles ruined using that stuff. Don't do it!!
Thar's good to know Brian. Thanks for the heads up.
Say, would you happen to know the preferred method for inhancing the original finish on a Lithgow
? Is linseed oil
acceptable to use on the wood?
Gary
A former Cheesehead now living in St. Louis
GO PACKERS!!
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I didnt read it either. To me that rifle looked better dark.
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