EJSG19 wrote:I'd leave it as is and keep it up best I could.
All I have seen is photos, which you say don't do the rust justice, but still, it looks pretty bad ass from what I can see.
The full cleanup will make it nice, in one sense of the word, but I'd be afraid of it losing most of it's character in the process.
I have my Dad's old Remington Fieldmaster he had as a kid, which is in a similar condition. Looks great when well oiled up, but its a constant struggle against surface rust.
old guy wrote:That old rifle has character, if you restore it it will never be the same.I had one just like it back in the late 60's.
John
farmerj wrote:I would leave that patina alone...
Makes it look gorgeous.
I don't disagree with any of these comments, and Thanks Mr. Gigantic Red Hat for your anecdote on your Dad's rifle. Is that the Pump .22 you had in Richfield?
My concern is that I want to keep it as a shooter, and make sure the damage already done doesn't get worse. I want to take it in the field without feeling guilty. I want my kids to be able to sit in a stand with it when they are 50 and not feel guilty about it. I know there isn't a whole lot of collector appeal to it, but it is a really badass rifle, and I would hate to have to resign it as a wallhanger because the elements go to it.
There is some good info in the post from Squib Joe, I'm sure I will just mostly leave it alone and try to keep on top of it. As it stands, right now, it functions flawlessly. I can assume it will stay that way if I keep up on it.