Just got some Birchwood Casey stock wax for the Mrs shotgun
Rubbed it in, and after couple mins, its gone all milky
WTF?
Has it reacted with what was already on the stock?? and more to the point, how do I fix it???
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Just got some Birchwood Casey stock wax for the Mrs shotgun
Rubbed it in, and after couple mins, its gone all milky
WTF?
Has it reacted with what was already on the stock?? and more to the point, how do I fix it???
Has it cleared up yet? I have used varnish that was milky but cleared up, maybe same concept
Nope - add more over top and it goes clear while wet.. the white when it dries
This is what it looks like
Put more on and it goes clear, till it dries again.
Looks just like when fish and chip fat goes through the paper and onto Mrs glorybox/coffee table thing - clears up with pledge or something though
WTF is going on?
Attachment 5284
RTFM ?
Don't you need to buff it ?
Did you have any other coatings or products on the stock other than std varnish?
Manual says apply coats
Buffed and buffed - all it does is give you a sore arm lol
No idea on products already on the stock as a used gun and new to us.
Not varnished, but not oiled so presume wax sealed
Could be shellac finish on the stock if not varnish or oil.
Are you using the stock wax "neat" ? So no dilution or anything else added ?
Yip straight out of the bottle
I fail big time with wood on guns
I made the colour disappear out of my AK forensic and now this LOL
Should stick to plastic and stainless
Haha, couple of other Internet references to BC wax going milky.... So not good news
Most guys seem to recommend carnuba, which is just plain shoe polish...
I have found the milky thing a little afyer searching but no reason or fix
This is carnauba beeswax and silicon apparently
Forend didn't do it which is strange
High wear areas in stock are ok so I'm assuming it was whatever was on the stock before hand?
Now what? LOL
For woodturning, veggie turps is the way we get liming wax off of wood, but there may be some less extreme way of removing the wax...
Mineral turps works as well, but you'd struggle to get rid of the hydrocarbon smell.
Fuck Spanners that would just rip your undies. Take it to the supplier and suggest that they better fix it up even if the have to get the woodwork stripped, sanded and re finished.
Brakeclean?
i would have said it is the silicon as the solvent dries in the mix. so when wet, it is clear but the silicone appears as it dries.
meths or turps if the meths dont work, then if that dosent do it i would give it a trip to the dish washer, run the wood in with a load of dishes, (just slip it in whilst the wife dosent see) the dish washing powders will strip any oils and waxes off like nothing else, but the heat will crack a painted/varnished surface, so if it is an oil/wax finish it should be fine.
you wouldnt beleve it is the same piece of wood in some cases when dealing with a heavily soaked stock, it will also raise any dings whilst it goes.
i would sugest that a $8 bottle of boiled lindsead oil will be a good investment, it will provide a beautiful finish but wont harm or react with other finishes good for conditioning old stocks.
greg
Thanks for the ideas guys
I tried some 'pledge' over it - milky gone away
So as suggested above, its on the top layer - maybe silicon?
BUT if i put the Stock Wax over the pledge surface, I get the same milkyness - pattern that was under the pledge
Might try some meths and see how it goes
Only issues with a refinish is me and wood dont go good together and the forend would need to be done also
Looks like a 'send it off' job LOL
Alright - hit it with some brakeclean on a rag, pulls it back to the milky pattern
Whos our resident wood stock man who wants a job?
What do you want done ? Sanding back to bare wood ? Checker work is the area to watch. If you want the whole stock, including checkering done, best to send it to a real pro with specialized tools. Maybe check with Mitch M who he recommends for wood work.
If it was a non checkered stock, I'd do it for ya, but too easy to fcuk up the crisp edges...
Have you tried paint thinners?
Think we're got to the bottom of it
Chatting with AO today, and mentioned, it, he suggested it was moisture
Just just got it back from being fitted, would have been steamed to get it to bend, thus will be full of water - makes 100% sense now
Chuck it up in the roof for a month and see what happens
Not a $20 gun but I will just throw it on the roof for a month :wtfsmilie:
That makes alot better sense.
if you have no joy send it down and i will give it a once over.
greg