Monday, July 12, 2010

Another Sheridan Blue Streak, Part 2

There’s really no way to make refinishing a stock interesting…

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I sanded the stock down as much as possible without changing the shape radically.

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There were a few chips I couldn’t remove entirely. No biggie. The Sheridan will end up with more dings in the future.

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The forearm sanded.

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Again, I tried to remove the minimum.

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First coat of Tru-Oil.

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For some reason the forends of the Sheridans of that era that I have are all lighter wood than the buttstocks.

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After the oil dries, I smoothed it with steel wool. And repeated the process about 8 times…

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I found it a bit too shiny. The grain is pretty well filled however.

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I decided to knock the shine down by waxing as the final step. Because I’m cheap and lazy I just used some Minwax.

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I shined up the plug.

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And reblued the trigger guard after removing most of the rust.

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The trigger got the same treatment but I also polished it and smoothed it more.

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The Oxpho blue worked magic on it. Need to polish items more to get a better blue I guess.

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I know, boring, but I’m in awe of how well the blue took.

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The only issue in reassembly was that the two front roll pins (pivot and plug retention) had stress cracks.

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You can see the crack better here. I replaced the pins.

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Using a piece of brass rod as an anvil while I spread the split rivet’s tabs to refasten the trigger guard.

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Another view.

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So all done.

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Compare it to the before picture:

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A small improvement.

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I haven’t measured the velocity but it pumps up and sounds as strong as any Sheridan I have (why do I have so many Sheridans?). I’ll shoot it a bit this week.

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