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Letter 8048
Color case hardening
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Hi,
I am currently a student a Murray State College in Tishomingo,
Oklahoma and I am in the gunsmithing program. I am the forth woman to
attend this school. We are building up 1909 German Mausers into a
sporting rifle. I am planing to rust blue my barrel and I want to
have a very vibrant color cased action. They have had very little
success in obtaining the results that I want to achieve for my first
gun..Frankly I want to blow them away with my creation. I'm sorry if
you don't think women should be doing this stuff but guns are a work
of art to me and I want mine to be just that....a work of art. I am
specifically interested in getting blues, greens, maybe purple if
possible but I need to know what mediums to use and how to go about
it before I can start. I would appreciate any information that you
could give me or even pass me on to someone else that may be able to
help me get this done. Time is urgent, and I need to complete this
rifle by the time this semester is over,! so please help me...I would
greatly appreciate it.
Peace be with you always
Jacqueline King
student - Marlow, OK
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Hello:
I am not a gunsmith but in my
Machinery's
Handbook from 1942 a process for the type of coloring you are
seeking is described. It involves boiling the piece in cyanide of
potassium (dark cherry red) then dipping in clear water and moving
vigorously. If not moved about in the water The mottled effect will
not be obtained. I believe this may be the old process used by
gunmakers of the past.
I am trying to find a company that does this as I want to restore
some old gun parts and do not want to try this at home.
Good luck.
Sam Bingo
- Auburn, New York
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Are you still looking for a good Color Case procedure?
or is it too late?
Leighton Stallones
- Austin,Texas
Ed. note: We are building a technical resource here, Leighton,
and as such it is never too late for a technical reply to be helpful.
Even if Ms. King has completed her studies, others after her who will
consult this page.
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I'm at the Lassen Community college for gunsmithing and we
recently redid our recievers. Mine came out beutiful, amazingly well
compared to others. What I did was heat mine in a furnace with 50/50
charcoal/bone (From
Brownells
) mixture to
1333-1375 for one hour then quenched it at around 1340. The quench
contained, nitre salts, pine needles, pine cones (ground up), horse
poo, bird poo, bird nest, and my roomates THC loaded urine. We also
had an air hose hooked up to the bottom of our quench tank so there
was water circulation. Colors came out spectacular.... I'd post a
picture but I have no camera.
Charles Bonsavage
- Susanville, Ca, USA
April 27, 2008
The cyanide method produces less than brilliant colrs. It's what
Uberti uses/used on their revolvers. Gets the job done but is "blah".
Charcoal 50/50 is THE way.
Tom Sargis
- Livingston MT USA
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