Notifications
Clear all

Anyone in central florida ever try Hot dip gun bluing??

12 Posts
5 Users
0 Likes
3,491 Views
X711
Posts: 266
 X711
Topic starter
(@x711)
Reputable Member
Joined: 15 years ago

Seeing if anyone close to me has ever tried it or has a home brew setup i could use/see/or purchase..

I'm talking about the chemical hot bluing not the cheap wipeon cold stuff..

I have a old spanish 32 revolver (copy of colt police) that I want to use as a guinea pig.. and if it turns out use as a wall or shelf decoration (not very safe for use anymore)

More or less I want it to look like a real colt police when it was new (going to find colt grips also)

If anyone has some knowledge on the process and setup let me know.

11 Replies
nachogrande
Posts: 5109
(@nachogrande)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 17 years ago

you want to diy? good luck but I suppose you could if you had the facilities and studied up on it. the diy ones I've seen are pretty much just ok, even some of the pro jobs are just ok. but the GOOD pro jobs are unreal. having the exp of doing many is a big + and the age and type of steel dictates how they should be done as many re-blues come out a plum to purple color. fords gunsmithing in Crystal river is one of the best and specialize in old colts. I was there in aug or sept and they were not taking phone or online orders (too busy, as the good ones are) and the wait for walk ins was app 12 weeks. they have diff colors types and grades and are not cheap. I paid app 250$ for a higher grade re-blue on a 1952 marlin waffletop lever and another 50$ to put it at the top of the list and got it back in 2 weeks. ended up paying more for the re-blue than the gun. but for something that makes you happy just looking at it for years and years, how can you put a price tag on that? check out their work online.

Reply
Cr0ck1 (Beagler)
Posts: 14758
(@beagler)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 18 years ago

I bought a kit. Made the barrels and action look just as new as the day i bought it.

Reply
nachogrande
Posts: 5109
(@nachogrande)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 17 years ago

there's a big difference between good enough, not bad,pretty good and OMG. I used to take it for granted and not give it much thought until you actually see a real good one. the older colt revolvers were famous for the quality of their bluing. it would be worth a 90 minute drive just to look in their showcase, they are that nice.

Reply
X711
Posts: 266
 X711
Topic starter
(@x711)
Reputable Member
Joined: 15 years ago

nacho: its a spanish copy of the colt police.. in other words its not worth much, they were known for low quality and wear out to point of being unsafe for use. I paid 50 bucks for it only because the steel was all in good shape and will me a perfect experimental piece...

I've watch lots of videos and read alot of online info all pointing to it being able to be done, of course the proper setup and chemistry is always going to dictate the outcome..

I wasn't really asking if it could be done as i'm confident it can, but more along the lines of if anyone has the setup already sitting around since most of my time would be spent building the setup compared to the process itself.

I spent a few years at a metal finishing company and got a few minor degrees in work related chemistry working with heavy concentrate caustics and acids..

so anyone try it before??

Reply
Page 1 / 3
Share: