by Wapiti » 13 Apr 2026, 6:52 am
Thanks for that info, Straightshooter, and taking the time to help.
Doesn't seem that too many people have encountered this with all the old guns being played around with.
Because we were keen to give this a go on the weekend, and to get to town is a 3hr round trip with diesel here at $3.60L, time is also expensive here and the rifle owner had only a day off, we used what we had.
So we did two things, used a heat gun and wiped the oil that came to the surface with enamel thinner soaked rag.
He thinners because that's what old mate had, and he didn't want any oily products .
Straightshooters tips and some we found when googling suggested either, so we tossed the coin.
The heat gun instantly pulls the oil to the surface, it just pops out and pools, to be wiped off with the soaked rag.
We kept concentrating on a particular spot, until it stopped pulling out oil and the grain lines reappeared. It was amazing how much was soaked in around where the steel in the action and barrel met the wood, and inside the inletting. By a well-meaning owner, not knowing that the wood was not sealed in the inletting.
Eventually, over a few hours coming back to it, all the black oil spots were gone and all the grain was showing completely the same as in the unsoaked areas. It was amazing.
Then we mixed some talcum powder with metho to a drawing paste, and trowelled it on the previously oily areas. When the metho flashed off, the dry powder pulled a tiny bit more oil out, but bugger all was still there. I guess without a heat gun this would do the whole job itself, but way slower than the heat gun did initially.
Then we tried the heat gun again, and a tiny few spots came up to be wiped off with thinners.
Then a second coat of our talcum paste, but there was no oil left.
I was amazing to see the grain that came out, which was previously black stains. Amazing change.
We wiped the complete stock over many times with the thinners on a rag, and it flashed off immediately.
We had a choice of either some new danish oil, or some Tru-oil, and we thinned out the first seal coat of danish oil and it was amazing to see how the wood that was previously saturated with black old oil just sucked the danish oil in immediately. Unreal.
Should've seen the fiddleback in the stock! Beautiful.
Steve will keep on doing this, including in the inletting until the wood is completely sealed from any more lube oil being able to soak in.
Again, thanks for the tips, Straightshooter.
And the talcum/metho drawing paste works unreal and costs bugger all too.
And the enamel thinners evaporates completely and is way faster evaporating out than turps, We didn't see any downsides to thinners, and it didn't bleach out any timber colour whatsoever and actually caused the oil to pull out quicker because it soaked immediately deep into the wood, but the heat gun pulls it straight out.
"The only way to avoid criticism is to do nothing, say nothing, and be nothing."
Aristotle.
Regards G,
AKA Dr. Doolittle