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Help me pretty up my gal?
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Thank You to garrettbragg12 For This Useful Post:
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01-07-2013 10:00 PM
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It looks like a BLO
finish to me, with a satin glossiness. You could try a BLO
touch up and see if it matches.
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Help me pretty up my gal?
Already looks good to me.
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In order to get an even, uniform finnish you would have to strip the stock and try to stain it and then apply whatever kind of topcoat finnish you prefer ie BLO
, RLO etc. Even if you do the above there is no guarantee that you will get a completely uniform finnish due to the grain and physical properties of the stock. I would rub it down with BLO
and leave it alone.
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Thank You to twh For This Useful Post:
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Help me pretty up my gal?

Originally Posted by
twh
In order to get an even, uniform finnish you would have to strip the stock and try to stain it and then apply whatever kind of topcoat finnish you prefer ie
BLO
, RLO etc. Even if you do the above there is no guarantee that you will get a completely uniform finnish due to the grain and physical properties of the stock. I would rub it down with
BLO
and leave it alone.
Can I rub it down as it is now or do I need to do anything to prepare the wood? I really appreciate your help. Thank you!
M1
/M3 Carbine: late '44 Inland
M1 Garand: late '44 Springfield
---------- Post added at 11:24 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:23 PM ----------

Originally Posted by
bonnoughj
Already looks good to me.

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Haha thanks, but unfortunately the pictures don't show the areas of wear, as they don't show up well on camera!
M1/M3 Carbine: late '44 Inland
M1 Garand: late '44 Springfield
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It does not look like an original raw linseed oil
finish. If it was varnish or verathane, it probably would not have the wear areas. It could be tung oil, though. I would take a 50/50 mix of mineral spirits and BLO
and wi[pe down the whole stock. I did it with my original Inland that had "wear" areas, and it evened it out nicely.
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The area around the grip is discolered but it's not wear. It's a build up of oils from your hands and from mainteance on your carbine. You can remove most of it with a good furniture stripper. Then you can apply the coating that you want to. With a shine to the frinish it makes me thing it might be Tung oil that was used on it.
I do hope you didn't drill any holes in your stock to mount the night vision equipment as your stock is a type 2 highwood which would not be the right one for the scope system but would be in demand for a mid production type carbine. But it does look nice for sure.
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Help me pretty up my gal?

Originally Posted by
Bruce McAskill
The area around the grip is discolered but it's not wear. It's a build up of oils from your hands and from mainteance on your carbine. You can remove most of it with a good furniture stripper. Then you can apply the coating that you want to. With a shine to the frinish it makes me thing it might be Tung oil that was used on it.
I do hope you didn't drill any holes in your stock to mount the night vision equipment as your stock is a type 2 highwood which would not be the right one for the scope system but would be in demand for a mid production type carbine. But it does look nice for sure.
I appreciate the advice! And no, no holes were drilled. No permeant modifications whatsoever. Just punch out the rear sight, and replace the original top handguard with a special M3 handguard (had an oval cut in middle) and you're good to go! When you want to go back, replace original hand guard, and remover sight bar and put the rear sight back in!
M1
/M3 Carbine: late '44 Inland
M1 Garand: late '44 Springfield
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Wipe it down with mineral spirits or acetone to knock down the shine and then rub in a couple of coats of BLO
.
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The CMP
web site has a vary good Forum on how they recommend to refinish carbine stocks.