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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Gunsmithing
Cerakoting fluted barrels
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<blockquote data-quote="Hired Gun" data-source="post: 1565073" data-attributes="member: 1290"><p>The contamination from clay would blow the whole job. That would be the last thing you would want to do after spending all the time getting the oil burned out of it and the surface profile created for the Cerakote to lock into. Before the job is oven cured we don't even touch it with gloves but by the support wires. </p><p></p><p>On your bedding jobs try paraffin wax as both a filler and a release agent. It is my secret weapon for about 15 years now. It goes on easy and polishes up to a high shine. You can warm it and rub it on with a cloth or drip it on to fill the trigger slot. Then trim it with a razor blade. To remove it you can use a heat gun, a torch or even a simple blow dryer with a clean towel to wipe it off. Clay is the bitch of all time to get out of the blind screw whole on the bottom of an ADL action.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hired Gun, post: 1565073, member: 1290"] The contamination from clay would blow the whole job. That would be the last thing you would want to do after spending all the time getting the oil burned out of it and the surface profile created for the Cerakote to lock into. Before the job is oven cured we don't even touch it with gloves but by the support wires. On your bedding jobs try paraffin wax as both a filler and a release agent. It is my secret weapon for about 15 years now. It goes on easy and polishes up to a high shine. You can warm it and rub it on with a cloth or drip it on to fill the trigger slot. Then trim it with a razor blade. To remove it you can use a heat gun, a torch or even a simple blow dryer with a clean towel to wipe it off. Clay is the bitch of all time to get out of the blind screw whole on the bottom of an ADL action. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
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Cerakoting fluted barrels
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