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#21 |
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Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Somewhere in Northern Italy
Posts: 2,646
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Richard
Of course one is technicaly compelled to clean a revolver from the muzzle. Sergio
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"Originality can't be restored and should be at the top of any collector's priority list. |
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#22 |
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Texas
Posts: 424
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Half the fun is breaking them down and getting 70 years of gunk out. They look so nice all cleaned up and grime free!
I bought a P.38 ac43 that was really gummed up and grimy. Inside was coated with this thick, gray, sticky as Hell "crap" (the only word I can think of for the substance). Outside had a thin layer over it. I think it was really old ball bearing grease. It was so gummed up that the safety lever would creep a little after engaging it. And I was hard even moving the lever. It took around two weeks of scrubbing each part with a military cleaner (that is VERY potenant) called PD680 to clear that crap out. Afterward, that finish was so nice on the outside, almost a purple'ish bluing. And the moving parts were so crisp after that cleaning. That one wasn't as fun to clean, but the result was great. |
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#23 |
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Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: ILL
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A trick that irks me is that a seller will include the worst magazine they have including ones that are not even functional and expect you to take it.
I got no problem cleaning a piece as it lets me see details. A major dealer foisted off an Erfurt with a cracked breechblock on me I discovered this way. |
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#24 |
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Texas
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Sometimes little details are missed, especially at gunshows. Never fails at one of those and I think it's the lighting in them and maybe one going over a particular piece too fast. Over the years, before buying, I've learned to slow down and not pull the trigger on buying until I've had some time with it. If seller is agitated or not cooperative with disassembly requests I have to walk away from it. Most aren't like that though and are usually patient with me.
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#25 |
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Join Date: Feb 2014
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I agree entirely. I do an armor level cleaning on anything I sell as a courtesy, and anything used that I buy.
We know these guns start to have problems when they get dirty. And you know damn well how discipline the German Army was with cleaning them and keeping them operational, as they worked. Only in extreme cases falling back/fighting constantly were they dirty or killed/surrendered where a GI picked it up and didn't clean it.
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Looking for any Mauser S/42 #89 parts |
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#26 |
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Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Somewhere in Northern Italy
Posts: 2,646
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quote: I agree entirely. I do an armor level cleaning on anything I sell as a courtesy, and anything used that I buy. unquote
I've always done exactly the same thing, keeping everything clean and in proper working order is simply a matter of "self discipline", too bad the vast majority of people is not like that, I'm afraid.
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"Originality can't be restored and should be at the top of any collector's priority list. |
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