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Gun stock refinishing


Johnsond
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I have done a Beech stock and a Walnut stock both on Air Arms rifles. I stripped the old varnish off with Nitromors, scrape off the gunge then clean the stock well - best done with the metal stripped off it wash all the residue off so it is very clean.

You then have two options, Birchwood Casey True Oil or Liberon Finishing Oil. You can apply both oils with cloth or even your finger, both touch dry relatively fast and you just apply a few coats in the day, let it harden overnight and keep rubbing it down. If you apply a few coats, it stays satin and if you like high gloss, keep going and if you end up with too much gloss, take it back a little with fine steel wool and use a little wax over the top.

I like the rub on Tung Oils as you don't get runs or brush marks plus it allows a gradual build up of coating until you get the finish you want.

With Walnut, you need to seal it by sanding lightly with oil and sandpaper then rub the slurry in to the pores, Beech is fine without doing this.

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I have done a Beech stock and a Walnut stock both on Air Arms rifles. I stripped the old varnish off with Nitromors, scrape off the gunge then clean the stock well - best done with the metal stripped off it wash all the residue off so it is very clean.
You then have two options, Birchwood Casey True Oil or Liberon Finishing Oil. You can apply both oils with cloth or even your finger, both touch dry relatively fast and you just apply a few coats in the day, let it harden overnight and keep rubbing it down. If you apply a few coats, it stays satin and if you like high gloss, keep going and if you end up with too much gloss, take it back a little with fine steel wool and use a little wax over the top.
I like the rub on Tung Oils as you don't get runs or brush marks plus it allows a gradual build up of coating until you get the finish you want.
With Walnut, you need to seal it by sanding lightly with oil and sandpaper then rub the slurry in to the pores, Beech is fine without doing this.

Don’t suppose you can tune air arms guns as well by chance ?
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I haven't done mine yet, the filler connector leaked and replaced that but the rest seems OK for now.

Do you know it has a fault? If it is leaking down, it may just need a new connector as mine did. They hold something like 2600psi in the gun!

I have a S300 which is the forerunner of your rifle so must be fairly old.

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9 hours ago, MattyF said:

Aye but you can service one ? I’m struggling to find any one and have a 15 year old s410 that needs all its seals replaced and anything else that needs doing.

There is a welsh bloke on the air gun forum . He does servicing .

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Not sure Steve , but it’s just not consistent, some times it’s that low you can see the pellet in the scope drop from the target... in contrast my BSA ultra can nail a pigeon in a head 30 -40 metres most shots.
The air arms should be the better gun.

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