just finished restoration of a Stevens Crack shot 26 that had been treated poorly. It took everything from rust conversion to silver brazing with some rust bluing and stock repair thrown in. I want to thank Mark for showing me what good work looks like. I'm sure this project would not have come out so well without all the wisdom he has shared with us.
Small world! I’ve also got a Crackshot 26 that I “saved” with knowledge from Mark. Sounds like mine was in better shape than yours, I just needed a basic conservation - no more of that brown “patina”. My grandma learned to shoot with it, nicknamed the “rat rod” in reference to the targets of choice at the local dump about a century ago.
This channel has been extremely valuable. I was able to fix a duffle cut on a Type 38 Arisaka that had the full mum. That motivation for me to pick up the tools and to make that repair came from this channel.
One more point. Because of you, I have set up part of my basement to do nothing but gun conversions. I've done 25 or 30 and I have many more lined up to do. It's amazing how many "gun men" have never heard of rust conversion and maintenance.
Loved this, watching Mark work on unicorns is great, but that's not how the rest of us can acquire the skills needed to keep these things running long into the future. I learned what I know by resurrecting basket-cases that weren't worth the time and money I put into them, but the experience gained is priceless!
There is a Turkish Mauser in my safe right now, that whilst old and tired, is clean, rust free, and safe to shoot, thanks to your videos mate. You're doing the Lord's work.
Thank you so much Mark. If you ever feel some tasks in your videos seem redundant, they are not. For your aspiring gunsmith subs, it is priceless knowledge
I have about $250 and maybe 20+ hours invested in an old Stevens bolt action .22..... Why? Because I wanted to. It was a rusty barreled receiver when I got it and now after a parts kit and a lot of work it looks as good as new. I'll never get that money back out of it, but that wasn't the point. It's going to be my daughters first rifle one day and hopefully worth more than just money to her
You can't afford to pay a pro, but if its your gun , its value is worth you doing it! Experience, and practice has its own reward. And you eventually will get good and preserve for a long time another good gun.
I did the same repair and conservation procedure on my fathers identical J. C. Higgins 12 gauge last month. Have another one to due in the near future! Great guns! They will reach out and bust a birds ass at an unbelievable distance!
I loved the model 12 reference since my first shotgun was one, got it for my 13th birthday, I passed it along to a young lad about 20 years ago and he still shoots it to this day.
No cigar in this video Mark!! 😂 Because of your generous tenacity and wisdom and all around skills i was able to do a conservation of my 1944 Ithaca 1911 that belonged to an Army B-17 pilot. Appon taking it apart i found rubber inlays from aircraft windows or vehicles soldiers used for sweetheart grips! The internals had to be changed because the gun wouldn't safely eject as the recoil spring was week and the extractor was buggered up!! Lol. I went to a military armory and got original internal parts all springs disconnector and sear and a forged guiderod. I boiled the frame and slide then soaked it in Varsol blew her out and oiled. Finally i was lucky to find a not used left grip panel that matched up exactly. The original saw better days although it was usable. Wish i could show you a picture! Can't wait for you to do that 1911! I see it's an original Colt from the two-tone magazine. This was my first build btw 😅
Bought a Mauser 1910/14 a while back, made in 1918. Looked really nice on the outside but when oiling/cleaning the insides, the towel came back brown/red... Took it apart, cleaned it, boiled it, gave it the steel wool treatment and replaced some springs with a wolff kit. Shoots really well now! Thank you Mark for the knowledge. I am doing my part! Cheers from Switzerland
Another gunsmith taught me to use a pencil before silver-soldering, the way you did the scribe but marking all over that piece of barrel. It mostly prevented the silver solder from sticking and made the cleanup much easier.
Brought back to life a W. C. Higgins .22 Click-Clack rifle made in the mid to late 40s. Rifle had no real intrinsic value, but it was a friend's grandfather item. It also has a "cool" factor in that it is a bolt-action / semi-auto rifle. Let that sink in...
The funniest thing is I lost a bolt handle that was brazed onto a Glenfield Mod 20 and was hoping to see how bad it would be to braze it back on (I'm a welder so that's what I'm used to rather than brazing), this definitely gives me a good estimate! Thank you very much! Thank you as well for another great video! I've always been interested in guns and love finding out how they work and things like that. My biggest annoyance are guns similar to the Winchester 77 and the Rossi Puma carbine that I've had the privilege to look at and clean only to find out that I don't have the tooling to give it a proper cleaning! Usually stupid things like not having the right size punches and such. Still, thank you so much for continuing to spread your knowledge and instill in the next generation, like myself, to be patient but to maintain what we have.
I appreciate ya highligthing the often forgotten department store soecials and the like. They may not always be that fancy, or that high a pedigree. But they are an aproacable history. What put food on the table each fall, or what was trusted by the doorway for 3 decades, or what kept the rats out of the chicken coop, are still worth remembering fondly and preserving
I had 2 teachers in my life that you remind me of, and both made a profound impact on my dealings in life. I wish I could have had you as well. I guess through UA-cam, in a way, I do. Thank you for your time and the production of these videos!
Thank you... for the videos, and for the motivation to do better. I've got an 1897 Winchester sitting in the corner calling my name and rightfully expecting a little TLC thanks to you.
Heck yeah! I have a Mossberg 195ka 12g bolt action with 2rd box magazine. I'm building 2 extended magazines for it just for giggles. 1 is standard 12g and the other for Shorty shells.
Thanks to watching you I restored that M LE16 French Berthier in 8mm Lebel. Took a lot of hand work with a broken thumb, but she looks great and shoots straight. Thanks for everything Mark. God bless.
Neat! I got one of these Higgins guns. Seeing that on your bench made me smile. I'm active in my pursuit. To find old, odd, and otherwise rusted, busted cast off pieces. To see how they work. While gaining the experience and appreciation of the once bustling industry. That was American gun making. Thanks a ton Mark. You've shown us so much. 'preciate yall
I gotta say, I dont own any old guns, but if I did, I'd be doing the maintenance. To be fair, I maintain my new stuff probably more than most people. Either way, it's a pleasure to watch a master work, as always. Thanks fellas.
Love your videos! I started with a Savage 24 (.410 and .22 mag) in a real bad way due to neglect, conserved it and later sold it to a guy WHO HAD TO OWN IT. It's a spiritual thing, what we do for rusty steel and grungy wood!
I’ve noticed there is a reluctance of preservation in militaria collectibles in general. Especially something so simple as leather preservation (the use of Lexol) which is far easier than proper gun maintenance and preservation. The leather items are skin and need preservation and moisture to survive indefinitely if properly looked after but instead just dry out and degrade away into dust and crack because of this fear losing its patina. I guess they’d rather lose the entire item to keep it original. 🤷🏻♂️ Like you say they’re not making anymore of them and it’s only original once.
I don’t buy new in box guns. I take everyone of them down as far as they need to be and I DO THE MAITENANCE! Many of my favorites are old top break revolvers and WWII milsurps. I really love them all. I think my next obsession is going to be gallery guns and Eastern Block Cold War pistols. Love the videos. They have taken me to the next level.
This is the first time I have seen another one of the J.C. Higgins bolt action shotgun. I own one of these, it came from my grandpa, and the front end of the barrel was a pitted mess. Here is a feature that mine has that you might want to test out. Put a round in the chamber, safety off, and bump the butt on the ground. It doesn't take too hard of a bump for mine to go off. And yes, for some reason this bolt action kicks. Not something you give to a first time shooter. Great video on it though. Wish mine looked that good.
I inherited my grandpa's JC Higgins model 20-12 gauge, it just needs to be reblued and the trigger guard is bent in towards the trigger. Other than that it works great.😁
Your inspiration and work that you do pushed me to decide to overhaul my Enfield Model 1917. It was re-barreled with a 2-groove and parkerized (unfortunately). Found some rust scale inside internal magazine that got parkerized over. That was one tedious clean up of chipping, Dremel work, removing slush and then re-bluing. It did turn out to be an outstanding rifle!
The only patina I like is on old Chevys. I'll admit, I've left an old pitted on the outside, amazing bore on the inside, 22lr with a coat of tung oil to keep it from getting worse. Thanks for the content, guys. It's always nice to see new videos when you put them out. 🤙🏾
Fun fact about the Ithaca M37. It is a shotgun that the trigger can be held down and shuck shells. The trigger does not have to be depressed in order for the gun to fire.
Just seeing this love to see you are getting work. Love watching you work brother. Keep up what your doing. In another life I wish I could work with you. So much knowledge. Thank you
Mark Novak gets work, and I bet he has to turn people away who *want it now!* The Anvil series gets his name out there in front of John Q. Public better than any business card or billboard AND for no costs except time and effort.
A friend invited me to look at a few old guns that he had gotten from his late uncle. He has them in a wooden wardrobe in a spare room. I was sad to see the condition of the guns with a layer of fine rust on all of them. Most were in a state of disrepair and some missing parts and a couple of broken stocks. Enough to keep you in videos for a month. A simple oil rag and a few minutes of time could have saved them some time ago.
I knew about rust bluing since iwas about 7 yo i did a Brazil 1917 years ago..i did not know about hot soft water so that turned out plumb brown i finally did a rifle from a friend that passed, that was a nice black..thanks i finally got it
I normally don't have any suggestions your great ! however doing refrigeration for 40 years id say refrigeration silver solder would have been a better choice , i also cut my teeth in the 70s doing bodywork back when we still fabricated and brazed in patches , I've learned a lot from your programs, thanks for sharing your knowledge
@billtheunjust it's not pre fluxed , it's thinner & stronger & can be applied far more precisely than brazing rod , it's not the stuff you buy at a home center, you have to get it from a refrigeration supply/ high silver content .
I think I have the JC Higgins 583.17 shotgun. It is just as bad as the rust. I also think it has a problem with the firing pin. There was a recall on it. I have never fired it. I kept it for a future project.
If I was making a joint as obvious as the one above, I would make a paste of flux and filings of whatever the joining metal is going to be. Paste it on the joint sparingly, clamp it up, then heat the more massive part gently until all the water has steamed off. Clean the outside of the joint at that point, tighten clamps if necessary and then begin serious heating, again of the massive part. You will see when the joint flows and can stop heating at that point. Much less mess to clean up.
Mark, when I reinstall shotgun barrel lugs, I cut a flat piece of Silvaloy silver solder to fit under the lug, apply some flux and clamp the setup in place. I heat it to about 1300 degrees so the solder melts and flux flows out. This way I have little or no solder cleanup afterwards. I know it's a good job if I see a thin ridge of solder all around the lug. You didn't indicate which solder you are using, but you once told me I could use Hi-Force 44 for front sight base installation. Do you think it's strong enough for lug work?
Could go into more detail about the hot water bluing process in future video? Curious as to benefits and downsides compared to rust bluing and how the process would differ.
@@CAMSLAYER13 He said he was going to do a hot water blue instead of a full rust blue, made it sound to me that it differed or was a more expedient/less intensive process compared to a rust blue which is why I assumed it would be somewhat different.
@@marknovak8255 I have seen your bluing videos, but it has been a long time so I couldn't recall "hot water blue" being referenced before. Is that referring to Dicropan "IM"? I had not heard of that method before so I was left somewhat confused to if it was a different type of rust bluing method or what have you. Thanks.
I have a question about the crack in the stock. to keep the stock from cracking more after the repair would one need to drill a small stop hole at the end of the crack like one would do with cast iron?
Im no expert, but it should be nonstressed after the acroglass, but i cant see how plugging the end of the crack with a dowl would be a bad thing. Bit harder to find the end of the crack in wood then chasing the crack with a grinder though haha.
I'm surprised you used 15% silver to braze the lug back on the shotgun barrel, 45% melts at a little lower temp, and flows way better. I have always been told 40/50% silver is what was used in all the gun factories for OEM brazing.
My question is, I used a penny with high copper content and it took off the rust without affecting the bluing. Is that an acceptable method for removing rust?
@@marknovak8255 I actually found mineral spirits took care of the rust on the bolt carrier and trigger group. I just soaked it in one of those tubs cottage cheese comes in. Never thought of using brass shells.
Little surprised you didn't put the barrel into lathe and just spun it with using some wet dry paper on it. Seems it would have been easier and would have even left the original looking machine marks on it.
just finished restoration of a Stevens Crack shot 26 that had been treated poorly. It took everything from rust conversion to silver brazing with some rust bluing and stock repair thrown in. I want to thank Mark for showing me what good work looks like. I'm sure this project would not have come out so well without all the wisdom he has shared with us.
Outstanding. Just sayin
Small world! I’ve also got a Crackshot 26 that I “saved” with knowledge from Mark. Sounds like mine was in better shape than yours, I just needed a basic conservation - no more of that brown “patina”. My grandma learned to shoot with it, nicknamed the “rat rod” in reference to the targets of choice at the local dump about a century ago.
Worked on a 26 & favorite 15 a year ago simple guns & good to learn with I felt
That monologue at the end was straight up inspirational. I don't even have a gun, but it made me want to get up, grab a tool and maintain something.
I love your motivation talks. We need more of this in our society. Our youth need to unplug from the games and pick up a tool.
I've started conserving some guns and just successfully re-blued a Winchester 94. Thanks for teaching us how simple the process can be.
This channel has been extremely valuable.
I was able to fix a duffle cut on a Type 38 Arisaka that had the full mum.
That motivation for me to pick up the tools and to make that repair came from this channel.
Thank you Mark for showing slobs like me the tricks of the trade. Too many craftsmen are taking their secrets to the grave.
One more point. Because of you, I have set up part of my basement to do nothing but gun conversions. I've done 25 or 30 and I have many more lined up to do. It's amazing how many "gun men" have never heard of rust conversion and maintenance.
Same here man. It's amazing what hides beneath the surface of old guns, and also even more cool what old guns you can salavage from the grasp of time.
Loved this, watching Mark work on unicorns is great, but that's not how the rest of us can acquire the skills needed to keep these things running long into the future. I learned what I know by resurrecting basket-cases that weren't worth the time and money I put into them, but the experience gained is priceless!
"Do the maintenance!"
Needs to be a T-Shirt. I'd buy it.
There is a Turkish Mauser in my safe right now, that whilst old and tired, is clean, rust free, and safe to shoot, thanks to your videos mate. You're doing the Lord's work.
Thank you so much Mark. If you ever feel some tasks in your videos seem redundant, they are not. For your aspiring gunsmith subs, it is priceless knowledge
I have about $250 and maybe 20+ hours invested in an old Stevens bolt action .22..... Why? Because I wanted to. It was a rusty barreled receiver when I got it and now after a parts kit and a lot of work it looks as good as new. I'll never get that money back out of it, but that wasn't the point. It's going to be my daughters first rifle one day and hopefully worth more than just money to her
You can't afford to pay a pro, but if its your gun , its value is worth you doing it! Experience, and practice has its own reward. And you eventually will get good and preserve for a long time another good gun.
I did the same repair and conservation procedure on my fathers identical J. C. Higgins 12 gauge last month.
Have another one to due in the near future!
Great guns! They will reach out and bust a birds ass at an unbelievable distance!
I loved the model 12 reference since my first shotgun was one, got it for my 13th birthday, I passed it along to a young lad about 20 years ago and he still shoots it to this day.
Mark I just love watching you work. I'm no gunsmith that's for sure, but I can't wait to watch a new video.
That carbide Burr is the funniest looking stone iv'e ever seen lol. Quite the rabbit hole sir
Ditto 🤣🤣
No cigar in this video Mark!! 😂 Because of your generous tenacity and wisdom and all around skills i was able to do a conservation of my 1944 Ithaca 1911 that belonged to an Army B-17 pilot. Appon taking it apart i found rubber inlays from aircraft windows or vehicles soldiers used for sweetheart grips! The internals had to be changed because the gun wouldn't safely eject as the recoil spring was week and the extractor was buggered up!! Lol. I went to a military armory and got original internal parts all springs disconnector and sear and a forged guiderod. I boiled the frame and slide then soaked it in Varsol blew her out and oiled. Finally i was lucky to find a not used left grip panel that matched up exactly. The original saw better days although it was usable. Wish i could show you a picture! Can't wait for you to do that 1911! I see it's an original Colt from the two-tone magazine. This was my first build btw 😅
Thanks for the Love Mark!! Have a Cigar on me! What do you smoke?
You guys are a hoot. Expert advice and skill demonstration with humor. The best!
Bought a Mauser 1910/14 a while back, made in 1918. Looked really nice on the outside but when oiling/cleaning the insides, the towel came back brown/red... Took it apart, cleaned it, boiled it, gave it the steel wool treatment and replaced some springs with a wolff kit. Shoots really well now! Thank you Mark for the knowledge.
I am doing my part! Cheers from Switzerland
Another gunsmith taught me to use a pencil before silver-soldering, the way you did the scribe but marking all over that piece of barrel. It mostly prevented the silver solder from sticking and made the cleanup much easier.
Brought back to life a W. C. Higgins .22 Click-Clack rifle made in the mid to late 40s. Rifle had no real intrinsic value, but it was a friend's grandfather item. It also has a "cool" factor in that it is a bolt-action / semi-auto rifle. Let that sink in...
So good to see you back Mark! Very good video as always.
Thank You Mark for presenting the most informative and enjoyable gunsmithing content i have found.
Best Wishes to You, Your Family and Friends.
The funniest thing is I lost a bolt handle that was brazed onto a Glenfield Mod 20 and was hoping to see how bad it would be to braze it back on (I'm a welder so that's what I'm used to rather than brazing), this definitely gives me a good estimate! Thank you very much!
Thank you as well for another great video! I've always been interested in guns and love finding out how they work and things like that. My biggest annoyance are guns similar to the Winchester 77 and the Rossi Puma carbine that I've had the privilege to look at and clean only to find out that I don't have the tooling to give it a proper cleaning! Usually stupid things like not having the right size punches and such.
Still, thank you so much for continuing to spread your knowledge and instill in the next generation, like myself, to be patient but to maintain what we have.
Making tools adds to the experience or...there's harbor fright.
I appreciate ya highligthing the often forgotten department store soecials and the like. They may not always be that fancy, or that high a pedigree. But they are an aproacable history. What put food on the table each fall, or what was trusted by the doorway for 3 decades, or what kept the rats out of the chicken coop, are still worth remembering fondly and preserving
I had 2 teachers in my life that you remind me of, and both made a profound impact on my dealings in life. I wish I could have had you as well. I guess through UA-cam, in a way, I do. Thank you for your time and the production of these videos!
Thank you... for the videos, and for the motivation to do better. I've got an 1897 Winchester sitting in the corner calling my name and rightfully expecting a little TLC thanks to you.
That J.C.Higgens reminds me of my first shotgun. A bolt action 20 ga Mossberg with an adjustable choke. :)
Heck yeah! I have a Mossberg 195ka 12g bolt action with 2rd box magazine. I'm building 2 extended magazines for it just for giggles. 1 is standard 12g and the other for Shorty shells.
Thanks for the tip on the acru-glass, warming it up mine is getting a little stiff. also the vinegar clean up.
You're a fantastic motivator, Mark. And I really appreciate the little tips and tricks you share.
Thanks a lot. 🤝🏻
Thanks to watching you I restored that M LE16 French Berthier in 8mm Lebel. Took a lot of hand work with a broken thumb, but she looks great and shoots straight. Thanks for everything Mark. God bless.
I learn something from every one of your videos. The skills are applicable to more than just firearms.
Hey, first for once, I miss these videos. I wish they were more frequent.
All the videos are excellent, you learn a lot from them. Many greetings from Argentina.
Neat! I got one of these Higgins guns.
Seeing that on your bench made me smile. I'm active in my pursuit. To find old, odd, and otherwise rusted, busted cast off pieces. To see how they work.
While gaining the experience and appreciation of the once bustling industry. That was American gun making. Thanks a ton Mark.
You've shown us so much.
'preciate yall
You are an inspiration and a tremendous mentor. Thanks to you, I'm willing to give it a go.
I gotta say, I dont own any old guns, but if I did, I'd be doing the maintenance. To be fair, I maintain my new stuff probably more than most people. Either way, it's a pleasure to watch a master work, as always. Thanks fellas.
Thank you Mark for another great video.
Well spoken Mark - Small Arms, Big Responsibility!
Thanks for sharing your knowledge and insights.
Classic Mark,
Thank you.
Love your videos! I started with a Savage 24 (.410 and .22 mag) in a real bad way due to neglect, conserved it and later sold it to a guy WHO HAD TO OWN IT. It's a spiritual thing, what we do for rusty steel and grungy wood!
Love watching your craftsmanship. Thanks for sharing.
I’ve noticed there is a reluctance of preservation in militaria collectibles in general. Especially something so simple as leather preservation (the use of Lexol) which is far easier than proper gun maintenance and preservation. The leather items are skin and need preservation and moisture to survive indefinitely if properly looked after but instead just dry out and degrade away into dust and crack because of this fear losing its patina. I guess they’d rather lose the entire item to keep it original. 🤷🏻♂️ Like you say they’re not making anymore of them and it’s only original once.
Mark. As always - "Outstanding" ✅
Absolutely right sir. This was a very enjoyable and informative video thank you for sharing this with us six stars
My pleasure
I don’t buy new in box guns. I take everyone of them down as far as they need to be and I DO THE MAITENANCE! Many of my favorites are old top break revolvers and WWII milsurps. I really love them all. I think my next obsession is going to be gallery guns and Eastern Block Cold War pistols. Love the videos. They have taken me to the next level.
Love the videos. I plan to try out the rust conversion on some rust tools so I can practice for if I come across a gun to do.
Very informative! Thanks Mark!
This is the first time I have seen another one of the J.C. Higgins bolt action shotgun. I own one of these, it came from my grandpa, and the front end of the barrel was a pitted mess. Here is a feature that mine has that you might want to test out. Put a round in the chamber, safety off, and bump the butt on the ground. It doesn't take too hard of a bump for mine to go off. And yes, for some reason this bolt action kicks. Not something you give to a first time shooter. Great video on it though. Wish mine looked that good.
Mark because of you ive learned to conserve my old ones boiling them and doing maintenance that had been neglected thank you
I inherited my grandpa's JC Higgins model 20-12 gauge, it just needs to be reblued and the trigger guard is bent in towards the trigger. Other than that it works great.😁
27:30 "Start doing this stuff, they're not making any more of these" ~ THE mission statement, in case anyone was wondering. 💚
I like this kind of episode where we see whats going through the shop at the moment!
Your inspiration and work that you do pushed me to decide to overhaul my Enfield Model 1917. It was re-barreled with a 2-groove and parkerized (unfortunately). Found some rust scale inside internal magazine that got parkerized over. That was one tedious clean up of chipping, Dremel work, removing slush and then re-bluing. It did turn out to be an outstanding rifle!
“Fly it out in space…”. That’s awesome.
The only patina I like is on old Chevys. I'll admit, I've left an old pitted on the outside, amazing bore on the inside, 22lr with a coat of tung oil to keep it from getting worse. Thanks for the content, guys. It's always nice to see new videos when you put them out. 🤙🏾
Fun fact about the Ithaca M37. It is a shotgun that the trigger can be held down and shuck shells. The trigger does not have to be depressed in order for the gun to fire.
If the trigger is held, the gun will discharge when the out of battery interlock clears. Slam fire for the win....
J.C. Higgins, a house brand for Sears and Roebuck, model number 583.1 built by High Standard. according to S.P. Fjestad "Blue Book" of gun values.
- And recalled by Sears for a bolt safety problem.
I love those Ithaca Model 37s. I have several, from Featherlight to Trench/Riot guns.
I have two jc in 20 and 12 beautiful hunting guns thanks mark
Great video....as always!!
Just seeing this love to see you are getting work. Love watching you work brother. Keep up what your doing. In another life I wish I could work with you. So much knowledge. Thank you
Mark Novak gets work, and I bet he has to turn people away who *want it now!* The Anvil series gets his name out there in front of John Q. Public better than any business card or billboard AND for no costs except time and effort.
A friend invited me to look at a few old guns that he had gotten from his late uncle. He has them in a wooden wardrobe in a spare room. I was sad to see the condition of the guns with a layer of fine rust on all of them. Most were in a state of disrepair and some missing parts and a couple of broken stocks. Enough to keep you in videos for a month. A simple oil rag and a few minutes of time could have saved them some time ago.
Some fine surface rust is really no big deal most of the time
Duck guns like this iv had a few iv done..got a love a bolt action
Love your video your the best gunsmith
I knew about rust bluing since iwas about 7 yo i did a Brazil 1917 years ago..i did not know about hot soft water so that turned out plumb brown i finally did a rifle from a friend that passed, that was a nice black..thanks i finally got it
Thanks Mark
You can use TIG to braze also which can help with heat , a little. There's a cold blue gel made by Birchwood Casey you may like.
Awesome work !
I normally don't have any suggestions your great ! however doing refrigeration for 40 years id say refrigeration silver solder would have been a better choice , i also cut my teeth in the 70s doing bodywork back when we still fabricated and brazed in patches , I've learned a lot from your programs, thanks for sharing your knowledge
Thanks for sharing
What's different about refrigeration silver solder?
@billtheunjust it's not pre fluxed , it's thinner & stronger & can be applied far more precisely than brazing rod , it's not the stuff you buy at a home center, you have to get it from a refrigeration supply/ high silver content .
13:47 and a certain AC unit.
Loved the rotary stone you have there, awful course grit though.
Great restoration!! Thank you
Strong work my friend
Outstanding!
Exelent Marco!!.
I think I have the JC Higgins 583.17 shotgun. It is just as bad as the rust. I also think it has a problem with the firing pin. There was a recall on it. I have never fired it. I kept it for a future project.
I understand the recall on mine.
Was regarding the retaining screw for the bolt.
I don't think of what's it worth..I just feel..it's got a be so it can be use..ya I do it cause I love to do it..
Thanks for the video.
Some guys watch cute chicks asmr to fall asleep. Others watch angels pissing
Love the videos Mark keep em coming
Great work !!!
Thanks for sharing
Are you currently accepting more work?
Great info as usual sir!
Nice work sailor !!
With Modern technology why wouldnt you tig weld the Ithaca ? Love the JC higgins stuff.
Because he's old school
If I was making a joint as obvious as the one above, I would make a paste of flux and filings of whatever the joining metal is going to be. Paste it on the joint sparingly, clamp it up, then heat the more massive part gently until all the water has steamed off. Clean the outside of the joint at that point, tighten clamps if necessary and then begin serious heating, again of the massive part. You will see when the joint flows and can stop heating at that point. Much less mess to clean up.
Mark, you got time to work on your own stuff? How's the collection looking? Patinaful?
Mark, when I reinstall shotgun barrel lugs, I cut a flat piece of Silvaloy silver solder to fit under the lug, apply some flux and clamp the setup in place. I heat it to about 1300 degrees so the solder melts and flux flows out. This way I have little or no solder cleanup afterwards. I know it's a good job if I see a thin ridge of solder all around the lug. You didn't indicate which solder you are using, but you once told me I could use Hi-Force 44 for front sight base installation. Do you think it's strong enough for lug work?
Magnesium Chloride, aka "deicer" will strip the chrome out of stainless, allowing the iron to oxidize.
Your wife is going to kick your butt for doing that to her Tupperware 😂
Aye! Maintenance, aye!
Could go into more detail about the hot water bluing process in future video? Curious as to benefits and downsides compared to rust bluing and how the process would differ.
Its the same thing
@@CAMSLAYER13 He said he was going to do a hot water blue instead of a full rust blue, made it sound to me that it differed or was a more expedient/less intensive process compared to a rust blue which is why I assumed it would be somewhat different.
I have several videos up covering bluing as well as parkerizing for your convenience.
@@marknovak8255 I have seen your bluing videos, but it has been a long time so I couldn't recall "hot water blue" being referenced before. Is that referring to Dicropan "IM"? I had not heard of that method before so I was left somewhat confused to if it was a different type of rust bluing method or what have you. Thanks.
I have a question about the crack in the stock. to keep the stock from cracking more after the repair would one need to drill a small stop hole at the end of the crack like one would do with cast iron?
Im no expert, but it should be nonstressed after the acroglass, but i cant see how plugging the end of the crack with a dowl would be a bad thing. Bit harder to find the end of the crack in wood then chasing the crack with a grinder though haha.
I'm surprised you used 15% silver to braze the lug back on the shotgun barrel, 45% melts at a little lower temp, and flows way better. I have always been told 40/50% silver is what was used in all the gun factories for OEM brazing.
My question is, I used a penny with high copper content and it took off the rust without affecting the bluing. Is that an acceptable method for removing rust?
Very much so. Ive seen it done with cartridge brass also. Not so good at getting into the bottoms of fine pitting however
@@marknovak8255 I actually found mineral spirits took care of the rust on the bolt carrier and trigger group. I just soaked it in one of those tubs cottage cheese comes in. Never thought of using brass shells.
Mark es muy macho.
Little surprised you didn't put the barrel into lathe and just spun it with using some wet dry paper on it. Seems it would have been easier and would have even left the original looking machine marks on it.