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Restoring a No4 Mk1 - Your opinions please!
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06-05-2013 01:51 PM
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The fore-end looks to be beech stained dark and possibly South African manufacture.
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If that wood as a set came across my work bench as an Armourer as opposed to an Enfield collector, I'd scrape off the handguards to see what colour they were underneath the crud. If they were a similar-ish colour to the butt and fore-end then all is well because an hour or so in the hot linseed bath would match them fairly closely. If not, then tip the lot into the stain tank that definately WOULD match them! Overnight in the stain tank and a few hours in the linseed bath next day and they'd be good for the next 30 years.
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The forend is beech. The handguards are walnut and you should be able to pick a new set of beech up for $40.00 or so. The butt is a light walnut and could be traded for a beech butt as it looks in good condition. The for pieces could be stained to match however this does not always give the desired result.
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question for peter.
what was the colour of the stain ,did you mix it up or was it a commercially produced type .
or maybe if you have the time can you describe the process .
thanks
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Is finding a walnut forend in comparable condition out of the question? I may just look for the beech counterparts as I have a Savage No4 that has lighter colored wood and I prefer that over the dark wood. My plan is to clean them and rub them down with boiled linseed oil. Peter, thank you for your input. A correct-ish shooter is what I am after here. From your advice it seems that a reasonable attempt to match the wood by color and not necessarily by type was performed during FTR. The history and tradition is what I am out to preserve and expose other shooters to. I may see about a trade on the buttstock as it is longer than my other No4.
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Well, you did ask, so I'll tell you! In our bigger workshops this is the stain mix. The wood always comes out a darkish colour.
Mix 5 ounces of STAIN, powdered, dark browwn (G1/HA7415) with 2.5 gallons of raw linseed oil (G1/HA13671) and continue stirring while heating to 100 degrees C.
Mix 1 ounce NAPTHATE, copper (G4/HA 12452) with 2.5 gallons of linseed oil and continue mixing while hgeating to 100 degrees C
Mix both solutions and allow to cool.
Contrary to what others might say, this ALWAYS works even on the lightest, densest beech! It WILL come out of the tank a darker colour that will match the rest!
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Thanks Peter.
What kind of solvent you use to remove this linseed oil+stain+copper naphtate?
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We don't want to remove it Bow! We want it to remain in/on the wood to darken it down and preserve it for ever more. On that basis I don't think there was a solvent to remove it. If it got onto your hands I assume that we'd just wash it off with soap and water of just dangle your hands into the trichloretylene vapour/degreasing tank. Oh dear o' deary me...... we didn't worry about the nicities of health and safety then!
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thank you for the reply ,one of the things i like about this forum is the wealth of knowledge and the sense of humour of those who have it ..... the knowledge that is .......thanks again !
reminds me a bit of work ha!!! not sure if that's a good thing .
anyway I will be in the net hunting ingredients now.