fourgearsavoy
Well-Known Member
Now thats funny **** thereI don’t think I’d ever put WD40 on my wood.
Now thats funny **** thereI don’t think I’d ever put WD40 on my wood.
Don't put anything on your gun that you wouldn't put on your pancakes.Axin fer a friend
And, these are “only” .22rf. Benchrest is so much fun when the body gets old!Kroil is pretty good for its intended purpose. BUT, you have to think it all through. What would you use on these? Gotta be careful sometimes….
View attachment 1540741
I hope the last thing I smell is #9!!!
Never tried it, but it’s lasted over 80+ yrs. Has to be pretty good.I like this stuff
[/URL]
Uh, what are those lolKroil is pretty good for its intended purpose. BUT, you have to think it all through. What would you use on these? Gotta be careful sometimes….
View attachment 1540741
Never use WD on a firearm. I’m actually a gunsmith, lapsed thanks to our horrible gun laws but a gunsmith nonetheless. The rifle in the photo is the first one I ever built, nearly forty years ago. Fired a few thousand rounds through it and there’s probably at least a hundred pix of it and me standing beside dead things, including this years elk.
View attachment 1542899 I still build the occasional custom rifle. Also built a handgun completely from scratch, cutting it out of steel with a drill, saw and files.
Here’s the facts, and it’s not heresay or old wives tales:
WD40, combined with powder residue and carbon will form a varnish that no solvent will remove. It hardens like epoxy. Sure, hosing it into your semi auto will loosen it up to fire. Sometimes. Until it is so gummed up that it won’t fire. It’s a MAJOR *** pain to remove. There are way better lubricants to use that are made for the purpose.
If you do use it because it’s all you have in the moment, and I’ve done it, clean the gun as soon as you can. WD is easily removed while still liquid but a bitch once it hardens.
This years elk I got in the second hour of opening day and the one my buddies wife got a week later, both on my property. Hers was 545 pounds of meat with a live weight well over 1000 pounds. Mine was 405 of meat and is about average size. Hers is the biggest we’ve ever seen in our area.That's the biggest elk i've ever seen with the smallest rack i've ever seen.