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Unread 07-19-2012, 01:15 PM   #1
Terry Tiell
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I followed the directions on the sticky to the letter not sure what happened but its not that bad all things considered I guess.
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Unread 07-19-2012, 08:49 PM   #2
nukem556
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Terry, did you use distilled water for the boiling cycles?
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Unread 07-19-2012, 10:45 PM   #3
Terry Tiell
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nukem556 View Post
Terry, did you use distilled water for the boiling cycles?
Absolutely. Fresh gloves every time, distilled water, 100% pure acetone, fresh cotton balls, brand new certified sale, brand new 500 gram calibrating weight etc etc etc...

Like I said not sure what went wrong but its not hateful looking thats for sure its just coal black. I may just leave it like it is for now and see if I like it after a month or if I just HAVE to re-do it. If it stays black I'm thinking of naming her Black Betty.
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Unread 07-20-2012, 08:43 AM   #4
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I just blued a Luger sideplate with Mark D's formula, and I got the same result as Terry. It blued quickly and easily, but ended up being the same "greasy black" as you get using Brownells formula straight out of the bottle.

One thing I noticed was that the modified formula was very thin. I usually heat the parts with a hairdryer and apply just enough formula to wet the surface. It will dry in a couple of seconds, and you will see a thin, dull coat of dried formula after the application. With this formula you could barely see that you had applied it, so maybe you need to use it in a "more aggressive" way, like applying several coats, using higher humidity etc? Mark's pictures of the rusting show a lot of red rust, but I didn't get any of that.
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