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Posted: 12/21/2010 9:54:21 AM EST
[Last Edit: 12/21/2010 10:15:52 AM EST by Old_Painless]
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 9:59:28 AM EST
very nice.  i always enjoy these threads.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 9:59:58 AM EST
Looks good!  Apparently our oak trees keep our squirrels stuffed, they don't bother the tomatoes.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:00:49 AM EST
Needs Tapco folding stock!!!
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:04:13 AM EST
Another great thread, O_P! Thanks so much!



Also, that's quite a bad case of shelf rash on that little pistol. It goes to prove that "NIB" certainly does not guarantee mint condition.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:04:44 AM EST
[Last Edit: 12/21/2010 10:05:38 AM EST by JamesP81]
Nice project.

Interestingly, I have a Marlin Papoose that shoots the bulk Wildcat stuff better than anything.  Doesn't make sense given how cheap that stuff is, but I ain't complaining.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:08:12 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:09:04 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:10:17 AM EST
Looks like a nice "back porch" pistol... perfect for sitting on the back porch with a cold iced-tea/beer/lemonade/whatever waiting for the varmints to show up.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:13:03 AM EST
Glad to see you could save this pistola, wonder how it got so badly mistreated sitting on the shelf.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:13:10 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:13:35 AM EST
Originally Posted By Old_Painless:
Originally Posted By DzlBenz:
Another great thread, O_P! Thanks so much!

Also, that's quite a bad case of shelf rash on that little pistol. It goes to prove that "NIB" certainly does not guarantee mint condition.


The Manager just couldn't understand how a NIB pistol had gotten so beat up.

But I was glad it was.



I would guess something ran through the trigger guard to secure it, making the scratches and broken trigger guard happen eventually.  Too bad for the manager, but at least it's getting used now.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:13:52 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:14:20 AM EST
[Last Edit: 12/21/2010 10:15:50 AM EST by www-glock19-com]





Originally Posted By Old_Painless:
The Manager just couldn't understand how a NIB pistol had gotten so beat up.





But I was glad it was.








yeah looks like someone did some prying on the trigger guard





 
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:14:57 AM EST
How did you smooth out the dings in the barrel?
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:15:15 AM EST
You're not helping.


I want one of these pistols....
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:15:34 AM EST
Excellent write up, as always.  Thanks for posting.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:15:35 AM EST
just as an FYI to all the youngsters  -

sometimes you need to try a whole bunch of different 22 ammo in a given gun, your gun might shoot 1/2" groups with some cheap PMC Zapper and shoot 4" groups with CCI target ammo.  

you never can tell. 22s are typically uber ultra finicky compared to other guns.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:16:10 AM EST
I learn a lot from your refinishing threads, O_P.  Enjoy it!


PS - Do you eat your squirrels?  Seems the tomatoes they try and steal could end up in the same pot as them and make a tasty stew!
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:16:18 AM EST
Nice thread and gun. Thanks OP.––IS
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:18:08 AM EST
Another great thread.



Thanks
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:18:15 AM EST
I'd cut the barrel to 4" and thread, put on a Silencerco 22Sparrow, and shoot CCI Standard velocity.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:18:27 AM EST
Originally Posted By Old_Painless:
Originally Posted By DzlBenz:
Another great thread, O_P! Thanks so much!

Also, that's quite a bad case of shelf rash on that little pistol. It goes to prove that "NIB" certainly does not guarantee mint condition.


The Manager just couldn't understand how a NIB pistol had gotten so beat up.

But I was glad it was.



Gander Mountain is the only gun store I know of where you can pull guns off the rack yourself and look at them.  So they get as beat up as the slow selling air-rifles at Bass Pro.  

Nice work O_P.  That's sort of like adopting a hard case kid and raising him right.

Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:18:49 AM EST
wiat. Left-handed bolt but a righthanded pistol grip? seems weird to me. Is this a 'normal' config for rifle-action handguns? I've never noticed.  XP100s aren't that way...
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:19:41 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:19:59 AM EST
Haha, I love the bargaining description. What an odd pistol. It reminds me of the cap and ball pistols you see pirates using in the movies.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:20:03 AM EST
That's one sweet looking gun. Another winner from OP.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:21:03 AM EST
I was hoping there'd be one of these today.  Thanks
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:22:09 AM EST
O-P - not to hijack here, quick question


I noticed you mentioned how the grain on the stock was "open".

When I refinished my little Chipmunk rifle, I sanded and touched with water, dried, sanded, touched with water, sanded OMG a thousand times.

I was just about to give up when I finally said "OK lets try the laquer"

I think I put 30-something coats on there, and it finally ended up looking very much like a little browning stock.

My only dissapointment was the few remaining places which are still "open" like little holes in the finish.  I assume this is due to the stock being so porous.

What can I do, not almost 5 years later, to fill these holes and complete the stock?
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:22:32 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:23:50 AM EST
Originally Posted By Old_Painless:

Snip

I also shot some Aguila, .22 Colibri, marked “20 grain bullet, No Gunpowder”.  These were as quiet as a pellet pistol, but hit several inches low, even at 25 yards.  But they will be best for in-town use on tomato-stealing squirrels.

And the squirrels are gonna hate it.



I've shot fox squirrels with Colibris before, and it doesn't do anything to them accept maybe sting them a little.  

What about the 60 gr Aguila round?
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:24:41 AM EST
Awesome as always O_P!

O_P in '12!
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:25:07 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:26:08 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:26:19 AM EST
[Last Edit: 12/21/2010 10:26:54 AM EST by DangerJ]
Thanks for the writeup



I find it curious that the bolt is on the left - is this purely so you don't need to remove your hand from the grip, or was this intended as a left-handed pistol?





ETA: I'm too slow!
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:29:39 AM EST
Originally Posted By THOLL223:
Glad to see you could save this pistola, wonder how it got so badly mistreated sitting on the shelf.


Twas no accident - clearly this was a long planned caper by the Texas Two.

Vern (AKA "Iron Gizzard") would venture in weekly over the course of a year and ask to handle the gun each time.

While OP distracted the clerk with tales of days gone by, Vern would surreptitiously whack the weapon against his mighty anvil of a neck.

Alas, poor Vern's neck could take the abuse no more, resulting in the aforementioned surgery and subsequent neck-brace and OP was forced to make the gambit premature, thus missing the intended $80 mark.

Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:29:39 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:30:31 AM EST
For $100 you really can't go wrong.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:31:36 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:32:47 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:33:28 AM EST
Sweet, Someday I will have myself a nice piece of property with my wife and I to will have a little "shooting range" in my backyard

I have already talked to my wife about it and she is STOKED about being able to shoot on our own property, She said "we need to be able to shoot ATLEAST 500 yards" LOL gotte love my wife since she is like most guy's in a lit of ways as far as "go big or go home" mentality, And she has been buggin me for a good year now to buy her some night vision goggles LOL
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:37:01 AM EST
Originally Posted By Old_Painless:


And the squirrels are gonna hate it.



You made my day.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 10:49:46 AM EST
Originally Posted By Old_Painless:
Originally Posted By RichR:
wiat. Left-handed bolt but a righthanded pistol grip? seems weird to me. Is this a 'normal' config for rifle-action handguns? I've never noticed.  XP100s aren't that way...


Very common for a bolt action pistol.  It allows you to open the action without releasing your right hand from the grip.

Take another look at those XP-100s.



It's good for shooting from the creedmore position if you're shooting silhouette.  You can work the action without completely disrupting your positioning.
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 11:01:40 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 11:02:10 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 11:08:07 AM EST
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 11:11:04 AM EST
I never thought I would want something like that, but this thread makes me want one!

Good job, O_P. (you are also one hell of a negotiator, apparently!)
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 11:16:06 AM EST
[Last Edit: 12/21/2010 11:16:29 AM EST by Old_Painless]
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 11:16:56 AM EST
The Gander Mountain here is horrible firearm wise.  I was in there a couple of weeks back and at least 5 of the 8 rifles I handled had varying degrees of rust on them.  Kid working the counter said "all new rifles come in like that, we just clean them up prior to sale"  Whatever.

OP - I know you probably know someone to transfer that from Bud's for nearly nothing, but good on ya for beating Gander out of it. Get it threaded and canned and nothing you shoot out of it will be "loud".  After you created the Sistema rush I was able to get 2 of them from GM for $450 OTD.

Wes
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 11:22:39 AM EST
[Last Edit: 12/21/2010 11:25:54 AM EST by cyborg543]
Originally Posted By hkx3:
O-P - not to hijack here, quick question


I noticed you mentioned how the grain on the stock was "open".

When I refinished my little Chipmunk rifle, I sanded and touched with water, dried, sanded, touched with water, sanded OMG a thousand times.

I was just about to give up when I finally said "OK lets try the laquer"

I think I put 30-something coats on there, and it finally ended up looking very much like a little browning stock.

My only dissapointment was the few remaining places which are still "open" like little holes in the finish.  I assume this is due to the stock being so porous.

What can I do, not almost 5 years later, to fill these holes and complete the stock?


no offense, but the way you did it was not going to work.

you cannot sand the pores out of the wood

do this:

sand the wood to whatever grit you like, say 200

wet the wood, let it dry.  this will raise the grain.  sand it again lightly

then start applying coats of finish.  you need a hard finish like tru-oil or polyurethane, not boiled linssed oil or tung oil.

after each coat of finish, sand the stock with high grit paper, like 400 .  this will let you fill the pores without getting that built-up bloppy look

basically what you are doing is filling the pores with varnish layers, without building up a thick finish on the surface

then, when you have the pores filled to your satisfaction, apply a couple of final coats of varnish and don't sand.  

sounds to me like you should use minwax gloss poly that's thinned 50% with mineral spirits so you can wipe it on with a rag.  dont try to thin the semi-gloss, it has flatting agents in it.

if you fill the pores with varnish and then keep sanding the buildup off the surface, you can make a finish that looks like a grand piano.

there are no big magical secrets to wood finishing, the science and methodology have been worked out for you

http://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Wood-Finishing-American-Woodworker/dp/0762101911

http://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Wood-Finishing-American-Woodworker/dp/0762101911
Link Posted: 12/21/2010 11:36:34 AM EST
Looks like they have a 22mag and 17HMR version as well.  hummmm
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