"Collectors Forum" - All Mosin Nagant are discussed here. Also the Russian and "Finnish capture" SVT38 and SVT40. This is an excellent place for new Mosin owners to ask questions. We have some of the best experts here looking forward to your questions. If you post a Mosin sniper rifle here, we may or may not move it to the sniper forum.
Preservation forum, please no altered military surplus rifles or discussions on altering in this forum. No sportsters. Please read the rules at the top of each forum
Oldvetteman wrote:Has anyone ever considered the possibility that leaving one of these rifles in its "original" chipped-shellac, greasy, beat up looking condition will increase the likelihood that Bubba will someday buy it and sporterize it because it is so rough looking? I know this sounds like I am advocating restoration vs. preservation, but I worry that when selecting a rifle to sporterize Bubba might decide to hack up the arsenal-rebuilt, chipped red shellac rifle, rather than choosing the rifle that has had the shellac removed and finished in oil. Lots of ways to look at preservation.
Welcome to the club... First things first... with your name and avatar SHOW US THE PICS OF YOU'R CORVETTE!!!!
Try this link for a view of my Corvettes. http://1drv.ms/1AUxHpl
Still trying to figure out how the Mustang got in there!
I put that question to a Mustang owning friend of mine who I was just on the horn with- how does a Mustang get into a garage loaded with Corvettes? He tells me that's easy to answer, you had an attack of good taste.. Nice collection, I will have to show that to another friend of mine who is big into Corvette's
Leave it as it is. The ages have been at work on it and man can only mar it.
Don't hit at all if it is honorably possible to avoid hitting; but never hit soft.
Theodore Roosevelt
At the risk of hijacking the thread further I'll just say the cars are (left to right) 1967 Mustang, 1970 Corvette (T-Top, 4 speed), 1958 Corvette (283 c.i., Powerglide) and a 2001 Corvette (6 speed manual). I restored (sorry, "preserved") the three on the the left. I bought the 2001 Corvette new. I've owned the '58 since 1976 and have restored it twice. I do most of my own work to include mechanical, body, paint and interior; pretty much everything except rebuilding engines, chroming bumpers and mounting/balancing tires. I restored several Corvettes through the years that I no long own. The Mustang was the last restoration project that I plan to do. I chose it simply because I wanted to to something other than a fiberglass body. I'm now in the mode of driving and "preserving" these cars. A lot of the time I used to spend on my cars is now spent on my guns, predominantly WWII-era battle rifles, along with casting boolits and reloading for them.
Many of the same "restore vs. preserve" discussions exist in the old car world as exist in the gun world. Everyone has to make their own decisions. I must tell you that when I take my old cars to a car show I get a great deal of satisfaction letting people see what these cars looked like when they were new. Some of their reactions are amazing.
Like the guns I collect, I consider myself to be a caretaker rather than an owner of the old cars. One day they will be passed on and I want them to be preserved the best way I know how.
I am shocked. Is that what a garage floor it supposed to be like? I built a shop for my race cars and before it was finished you couldn't see all of the floor. Nice collection, I had a 69 Stingray with matching LT 1 motor. I had a 65 Mustang too.
Oldvetteman wrote:Perhaps he got tired of Corvette discussions. I feel like I hijacked the thread but I was only answering questions....
No, I don't think so. We get a lot of one time question posts. Usually they involve something they could have learned or avoided by reading the forum rules. The animals in this zoo get riled up about certain subjects.
Oldvetteman wrote:Perhaps he got tired of Corvette discussions. I feel like I hijacked the thread but I was only answering questions....
No, I don't think so. We get a lot of one time question posts. Usually they involve something they could have learned or avoided by reading the forum rules. The animals in this zoo get riled up about certain subjects.
Its a good zoo. Bubbas picture is on the do not allow sign at the entrance. [emoji2]
Oldvetteman wrote:Perhaps he got tired of Corvette discussions. I feel like I hijacked the thread but I was only answering questions....
No, I don't think so. We get a lot of one time question posts. Usually they involve something they could have learned or avoided by reading the forum rules. The animals in this zoo get riled up about certain subjects.
Yeah, like cars and food. Bacon or in particular.
Sé onr sverdar sitja hvass! - May your swords stay sharp!
I just finished cleanig an SKS that had been overpacked with cosmoline by removing the wood parts and spraying the metal with Birchwood Casey Gun Scrubber Synthetic Firearm Cleaner ,then using paper towels and Q-Tips to remove the grease. This gun was so badly packed with grease it would never have functioned without a good cleaning. The I used REM Oil with TEFLON to finish the metal parts. I wiped off the wood ,put it in a plastic bag. and left it in a hot attic in the summer for a month to get the rest of the cosmoline out. After more paper towels it come clean. I still bleeds a lttle cosmo after shooting on a hot day,but a wipe down gets that. Before I knew better I would have stripped it and added a stain finish, But I think that is a bad idea now, They look better just left natrural.Each little nick and scratch was put there by someone who depended on that gun, I even have a T53 carbine with the Chinese soldier's name carved into the stock with a small heart.JGC