Let's Build an InvestArm Plains Pistol Kit Part 10: Stock Stain and Metal Finish | Muzzleloader

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 3. 02. 2024
  • Today we're back in the shop for our first Winter 2023-2024 project! This kit is a continuation of the Lyman Plains Blackpowder Pistol, now made by InvestArm of Italy.
    In this video I take a big risk and apply Aqua Fortis to the stock without testing it first, then I intentionally rust my metal hardware for a nail biting shop session.
    In the next video, we begin stock stain and metal browning.
    Hawken Resources:
    [hawkenrifles.com/]
    [www.thehawkenshop.com/hawken_...]
    The BEST Book on Hawkens and their history
    [www.trackofthewolf.com/Catego...]
    Today we're officially starting our InvestArms Plains building series. This series will cover the construction of this muzzleloader kit, the tools needed, and several different processes of wood finishing and metal finishing.
    Click here to SUBSCRIBE - bit.ly/ILMvideo
    In this video, we're unboxing the kit to get a detailed look at each of the parts before we move onto assembly. I talk about each of the Hawken parts, their purpose and place on the muzzleloader, some of my top tips for muzzleloader kit building, and my recommendations on what to research before starting.
    If you have any questions about this kit or the techniques I'm using, leave them in the comments below. I will address as many comments as I can in videos associated with this series to give you as much detail as I can about the answer.
    Muzzleloading, muzzleloader, muzzle loader, mountain man, longhunter, bushcraft, living history, longrifle, flintlock, blackpowder
    #muzzleloader #muzzleloading #blackpowder #hawken

Komentáře • 29

  • @omf2007
    @omf2007 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Good morning! I have really enjoyed watching the progress on this project. Thank you for sharing your experience so far. "Aqua Fortis" (strong water) is nitric acid in a solution. It was used form many things in industry. It's pretty corrosive to most metals so you definitely want to neutralize it with a base compound. I.e. baking soda. If you don't, over time you MAY see some small areas of corrosion where wood touches the metal. The main/effective ingredient in the solution you used from Jax is an acid form of selenium - selenious acid. This is a common coloring agent used in changing color/appearance of brass, copper, bronze, and other similar metals. A type of sulfur solution can also be used. Ferric chloride is generally the main ingredient in metal browning solutions but there are many other "formulas" that have been, or are used today. All these can be made/mixed at home but, it's usually much easier (and for most...) safer to purchase established products.

  • @robgoose8126
    @robgoose8126 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Needs more heat! Jim Kibler's video says you cannot use a hair dryer, which leads me to believe this. I did my colonial with a harbor freight heat gun on high and it turned out beautifully.

    • @minigpracing3068
      @minigpracing3068 Před 5 měsíci

      I was surprised by how much heat I needed with ferric nitrate. I may try some iron acetate on a stock next to get an ebonized color.

  • @98Kentuckian
    @98Kentuckian Před 5 měsíci

    Finish on that stock came out awesome. I'm stockpiling all of these wonderful little tidbits of knowledge in my brain for the next kit i build. Working on cleaning up my shop so i can hopefully one day carve out a stock from scratch. Thanks again for the content !

  • @user-cc3si8ik3o
    @user-cc3si8ik3o Před 4 měsíci

    Exceptional process…looks pretty good Ethan.Good job 👍✌🏻😉

  • @bigbusch4209
    @bigbusch4209 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Big risk for big reward! I appreciate you getting out of your comfort zone and ride the rollercoaster of emotions for us. Seeing that green stock, I was a little worried for you, but what a nice brown it turned out to be. I think this kit is goin to be a beauty.

  • @jackblackpowderprepper4940
    @jackblackpowderprepper4940 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Next time before applying the aqua fortis burnish the wood with a deer antler. Work every inch pushing the grain down. On your first coat of oil mix 2 parts turpentine and one part tru oil. Apply with a red scotch brite pad it will help fill the grain plus allowing you to manipulate the highs and lows of color like an old used stock. Burnish again after it dries sometimes 2 or 3 times. Then go to straight oil. I learned this technique from a Jim Kibler vedio. He used boiled linseed oil. I use truoil on all my stocks. You definitely want to neutralize it. After baking soda I then rub it down with household ammonia to make sure. Nice build Ethan. 👌

  • @Strutingeagle
    @Strutingeagle Před 5 měsíci +3

    A lot of folks refer to raising the grain as whiskering it up.

  • @samellowery
    @samellowery Před 5 měsíci +1

    A good source for lint free rags for putting on wood finishes are cloth baby diapers.

  • @HawkenHorse
    @HawkenHorse Před 5 měsíci

    Wow that really looks good. 😅 I was nervous with you.

  • @chaecoco2
    @chaecoco2 Před 5 měsíci

    I have darkened wood using sodium hydroxide. This is an old technique of staining woods that have alot of tannin content. I have used it on cherry and it works quite well. It is a very strong base, so you obviously have to be careful and wear gloves and eye protection when working with it. I think I neutralized it by misting a diluted vinegar solution.

  • @gjkorfinhays
    @gjkorfinhays Před 5 měsíci

    Just a tip, if you cross drill the ramrod ends and peen in a piece of brass rod 1/16 " or so it will save some headaches later. I've had to pull several ramrod ends from rifle and pistol barrels over the years and it kinda sucks😊 I am 62 years old and have 40 plus years playing with muzzle loaders I shoot primarily flintlocks now and when people ask me how hard they are to shoot, I answer that I've been shooting flintlock for 30 years now and I'm still learning how.

  • @redlemur6073
    @redlemur6073 Před 5 měsíci

    Windex for neutralizing,spray on then rinse not neutrolizing can cause it to revert to the green

  • @minigpracing3068
    @minigpracing3068 Před 5 měsíci

    I went nickel electroplate on my Hawken kit, but "blued" the screws to have a nice contrast.

  • @davefellhoelter1343
    @davefellhoelter1343 Před 5 měsíci

    you may want? to Passivate all threads and or unfinished surfaces along with finished surfaces?
    I have taken more than one arm or any equipment apart only to find corrosion in hard to reach or not often accessed areas?

  • @rambosnake666
    @rambosnake666 Před 5 měsíci

    👍

  • @LongPondNH
    @LongPondNH Před 5 měsíci

    Should you have neutralized the Aquafortis before you applied oil? That's the way I would read those instructions.

  • @minigpracing3068
    @minigpracing3068 Před 5 měsíci

    Uggg... I wish I'd known, I have enough ferric nitrate crystals to last the rest of my life! I mixed up a bottle a coupke years agi fir a stick, and have plenty solution to kast many more kits. And I have ounces of crystals left.

  • @redlemur6073
    @redlemur6073 Před 5 měsíci

    I would have cooked it a little more then go oil (finnish)

  • @operationcaddyshackgopher1664

    Is that a riffled bore?

  • @hazcat640
    @hazcat640 Před 5 měsíci

    Ethan, How did the stock turn blue after sanding and before you stained it? Is it just a 'trick of the lighting'?

  • @user-tv8bf5xd6u
    @user-tv8bf5xd6u Před 3 měsíci

    Don't know why you wouldn't follow the directions on the bottle in the first place. ?

  • @redlemur6073
    @redlemur6073 Před 5 měsíci

    Let er rip

  • @redlemur6073
    @redlemur6073 Před 5 měsíci

    No on the hair dryer,sorry

  • @redlemur6073
    @redlemur6073 Před 5 měsíci

    The green is ugly,IT WILL BE PERFECT!😅