Amateur work,would have been better,should have used epoxy with wood dust rather than using back epoxy and tying the stock with rubber band then sanding the complete stock and apply stain and finish.
apart from the fact that the video is too fast and you don't understand much of what you're doing, on the other hand it hurts your eyes, then this is a fake restoration. You did nothing to the mechanics, just a brush for surface rust, the stock was damaged, it stays that way, and you can see it, you don't plug the screw hole, and on the other hand it takes on a disgusting color. finally, I've never seen old paint removed from a stock with a knife. forget it...
Hi there Enzo, thank you for the comment. May I suggest first taking some English lessons as you seem to have forgotten to capitalize almost every word at the start of each sentence. That aside; this restoration was actually done properly. The condition the rifle was in when the video starts was one of potential danger to the shooter if it was attempted to be fired. At the end of the restoration the rifle has no active rust, the finish of the metal parts did not need to be altered, and the stock is in a position where it can safely translate recoil to the shooter without catastrophic breakage. Im assuming with a name like Enzo you must be Italiano. Maybe the reason you guys lost WWII was because you didn’t know how to properly repair a rifle? Buona giornata!
di jual gak tu bos
What caliber is it?
Amateur work,would have been better,should have used epoxy with wood dust rather than using back epoxy and tying the stock with rubber band then sanding the complete stock and apply stain and finish.
com one dude don't use black epoxi for that job
Eres nefasto para hacer un vídeo debite de hacer el video más rápido fue muy lento 😅😅😅😅
Promo_SM
apart from the fact that the video is too fast and you don't understand much of what you're doing, on the other hand it hurts your eyes, then this is a fake restoration. You did nothing to the mechanics, just a brush for surface rust, the stock was damaged, it stays that way, and you can see it, you don't plug the screw hole, and on the other hand it takes on a disgusting color. finally, I've never seen old paint removed from a stock with a knife. forget it...
Hi there Enzo, thank you for the comment. May I suggest first taking some English lessons as you seem to have forgotten to capitalize almost every word at the start of each sentence. That aside; this restoration was actually done properly. The condition the rifle was in when the video starts was one of potential danger to the shooter if it was attempted to be fired. At the end of the restoration the rifle has no active rust, the finish of the metal parts did not need to be altered, and the stock is in a position where it can safely translate recoil to the shooter without catastrophic breakage. Im assuming with a name like Enzo you must be Italiano. Maybe the reason you guys lost WWII was because you didn’t know how to properly repair a rifle? Buona giornata!