Those of us from the USA envy Europeans and eastern countries having the ability to use a metal detector and finding MG42’s , PPSH SMG’s etc right in the ground. I’m sure so savvy people have used this method on some good finds and have them stored away for a “rainy” day. Haha 😆
We also find land mines, bombs and grenades which can go off as soon as your shovel goes near them, and it’s not like we can actually use them when we find them.
Thanks for posting this. My father's S&W 22 revolver he carried as a personal gun in the Marine Air Corp during WWII in the Pacific looked much like this after the storage unit it was in was flooded and the owners of the place did not let me know. I've serviced revolvers before, but thought this might be gone. At least with what you did here, I can restore it as a keepsake even if I never fire it again. Again, many thanks.
Wow. you have certainly outdone me. I bought an old broken break top revolver for 130, but after stripping it, it was only missing one spring. You did a lot more work, and I loved watching it.
Another amazing video and restoration, thank you! What surprised me the most, I think, was the complexity of a relatively "simple" gun. Who'd have thought there was so much in it?
Since I am a gunsmith, and have a personal love for wheel guns, I really appreciate this video. Great work. Looks like the cylinder lock-up is nice and tight. How someone could let a firearm fall into such a sad state of disrepair is beyond me.
@@RJ-zm3tr I thought the exact same thing, especially with the ease in which the outer layer of rust was removed. The pitting in the rifling and on the frame did not match the extreme level of rust. It's just clickbait.
Congratulations, for the excelent job. My father had an ASTRA, model Cadix 38 Spc. as personal protection gun, for decades. He got it at 60s. This revolver was his everyday concealed weapon.
Simply incredible that you are able to bring these things back to life or in some cases improving it. You’ve earned every subscription you have Sir, and mine too today. I have only seen a few of the precision processes, but the homemade electrolysis was my favorite. Amazing
Great job. A real pleasure to watch. I was hoping for a chrome finish and maybe a pearl handle just to make the difference even more extreme but wow. Incredibly skillful gunsmith.
I had a similar experience restoring a 1911 once. Me and my wife spent the better part of a day in a bus station in Manila. I noticed a security guard with a rusty old gun. I love rusty old guns. I found out it was a family treasure from the war but wasn’t reliable. So as an amateur gunsmith I offered my help. After many hours of work waiting for our bus and working on the fly it was restored to it’s former glory. The look on his face when he test fired it was priceless. I got our tickets half price HAHAHA👍👍👍
Spanish Guns factories always made copies of America guns. That's because the spanish Copyright laws rules that to uphold your blueprints in Spain you should have factories in the country, and not every American gunmaker was interested in having factories there.
Really enjoyed this video! Nice that it had no talking, just explanatory captions when needed. I am an amateur smith myself and enjoy bringing old or damaged guns back to life. Did an old S&W revolver for a friend recently that also had excessive pitting, so I just polished what I could without removing serial numbers, etc, then cold blued it. Looked 90% better than before! Great job…subscribed! Wish you had a nice old Colt or S&W to do but they don’t come along in that kinda shape often, or are too expensive to start with.
In spanish: Excelente trabajo de restauracion anuevo y aun mejor haz pulido, las rebabas de fabricacion de la fabrica, haz niquelado, mejorado todo!!! Excelente!! Felicitaciones de Argentina.
First gun I ever loaded and shot. My grandfather was a customs agent and he carried this back in the day until the end of his career where they were issued Glocks. Either way, this was awesome to watch regardless but it also took me back to some good times. Thanks for the upload.
This would've been a perfect candidate for some cerakote or duracoat!! Although your method was really awesome too, I love the patina look to it. This really makes me want to find a worn out revolver to restore!
Plum brown would have been anachronistic but given the level of pitting I think it would have looked good. Awesome job on this revolver. Truly amazing.
@@Daddy53751 I imeadately conceed that Cerakote is mostest bestest hard & durable finish . Dura Coat is very durable , but CeraKote even more . But that said , there are still reasons to prefer Dura Coat , at least some of the time . Cerakote has a good selection of color , Dura has huge selection . Dura works better for intricate multi color design . ( Not my thing , but some people do .) But in this instance , Dura Coat will better fill in pits , while the physically thiner CeraKote will exactly conform to the host , pits and all .
Excellent restoration! The chemical bluing turned out very well, I'm glad you did that instead of the wipe-on bluing that is actually an oxidized copper that does nothing to protect the metal. You clearly have talent for restoring firearms and I can't wait to see what you do next!
I love you’re work. I do restoration’s on vintage guitars so I know the effort involved in your craft. The guys that give their opinions on how you ‘should have’ done things is hilarious. Where are their videos?
I cringed at the side plate removal . Traditional rust blueing was a thing of beauty on 19th century arms . And an interesting process to document for its own sake. But for a gun with modern steels , in that starting condition , professional grade Cold Blueing would give more even coloring , and a more durable finish . Yes , I've done it to zero finish remaining duty revolvers , but it was before the era of the internet , or affordable digtal cameras .
Great restoration. I did something similar and instead of blueing, I used flat black wood stove paint. Don't make faces guys. Guns have been painted for MANY years. For an old gun, especially one with some rough surfaces, a very durable paint such as engine block or wood stove, comes out looking pretty good and can fill in some of the pitting.
If you're like so many people, not only does the loss of patience come with age, but so many of us have had our brains rewired by computers and the internet. I have some patience remaining, but focus and concentration are long gone.
That’s a very nice restoration job. The interesting thing will be to see how easily the ammo will load into the cylinders and how easy the fired cases will eject for the cylinder.
@@MrSterling314: Judging by what the rifling looked like, I personally would have bored and re-sleeved the barrel. Hone and polish is a good idea, just don't over do and make a sloppy fit.
@@d.s.steele3100 yup. Or just rebarrel it. But yeah don't wanna make those chambers oversized lol. Also the fact that he did zero polishing or any attempt to remove pitting at all annoys me. How can you call this a 'restoration' when all you did was reblue it lol. But whatever, it makes a popular video I guess lol.
@@MrSterling314: I think he might have been going for a patina look. If so a new barrel (if one can be found) would look out of place. That is the reason I suggested a re-sleeve. That way it could be fired safely, but keep as many original parts as possible.
once rust settles in, it's very difficult to restore the gun to a bright luster. Hai delle mani d'oro! Peccato che in Italia ci siamo tante restrizioni con le armi. Qui negli Stati Uniti, armieri come te, sono difficili da trovare, sopratutto quelli che hanno la passione!! Grazie dei tuoi video!!!
I read that when cleaning the muzzle it's good to follow the direction of the bullet (from inside to outside) and only go in that direction (pass the entire brush through the barrel, handle and everything). Thank you for this very satisfying video :)
Heard that same thing several time when I was a small boy.In 1958 while in the Army I asked our company warrant officer that ran small arms repair if that were true.He said that he did not think so and he had never seen anything in writing that said to do it that way,Years later I asked another small arms expert the same question,got the same answer.Both those men were experts in weapons up to about 155 caliber some I think that might be an urban legend.
I wish there were more videos like this on TH-cam I feel like it’s a good thing to pull in views and not a lot of people are doing it like seriously hardly anyone is doing this
Buenas noches caballero si me podría ayudar o recomendar que liquido es para que quite toda esa corrosión lo que lo echa primero gracias estaré ala espera de su respuesta que Dios le bendiga a este canal
Here in UK I restore mostly old air rifles and pistols, striking up a rusty one is hard work, it's nice to sit back for a change, excellent work, love snub nosed revolvers
I have got an Old Shotgun that was Damaged in a friends House fire he gave it too me said do whatever with it the gun is Badly Damaged is it possible to have it restored it can't shoot i would like to have it restored its a Pump Shotgun a Remington Model 10
@@jared.p240 alight i just need to know what chemicals and mixtures to use so i can clean it off and then have a specialist take it part and replace the damaged parts because i have no clue how to do that
Well, you just got my subscription. However, I missed the entry of head-banging heavy metal, eye-popping optics and then a guy that goes on for ten minutes before coming to task.
The Cadix line of pistols are (fairly good) S&W clones built by Spanish company Astra between 1958 and 1973. good work resurrecting this piece of history
@@gautam-fe7sk … I use a polyurethane planter with one gallon of vinegar and half cup of dish soap. It removed the rust but depending on how the rust is. I only work on Mauser with surface rust, not pitted. Then I sand it smooth with 400 wet sandpaper, then OOOO steel wool before bluing.
Great video! Where did you get spare parts from? These Astra pistols are Smith & Wesson clones and are quite high quality. With your permission, a tip regarding proper operation of a revolver: Never slam shut-close the cylinder. Always press the release button, insert the cylinder and then release the button for locking. Take care!
The chances of breaking the floating firing pin aren't great , but are both greater than zero , and greater than with a hammer mounted firing pin . But to be extra cautious , just use some snap caps ( dummy cartridges , with rubber-ish material in position of the primer , to cushion the hammer/ firing pin fall. Available commercially both plastic and aluminum) .
@@wylieisnothere5062 It's kinda funny you said something like that. We have more guns than people in America. He might want to make them endangered but it ain't gonna happen.
My famous rust remover: lamtechstore.com
you can buy me a coffe here : www.buymeacoffee.com/RestauraTo ❤
It’s not pee right?
Usaste vinagre blanco
Those of us from the USA envy Europeans and eastern countries having the ability to use a metal detector and finding MG42’s , PPSH SMG’s etc right in the ground. I’m sure so savvy people have used this method on some good finds and have them stored away for a “rainy” day. Haha 😆
I'd rather go for your 2nd and being able to buy them, trust me
We also find land mines, bombs and grenades which can go off as soon as your shovel goes near them, and it’s not like we can actually use them when we find them.
You envy a place without the 2nd amendment?
@@mlyniecm 🤦♂️
You envy the destruction of countries and the deaths of millions of people just to be able to find guns in the ground..... wow.....
Thanks for posting this. My father's S&W 22 revolver he carried as a personal gun in the Marine Air Corp during WWII in the Pacific looked much like this after the storage unit it was in was flooded and the owners of the place did not let me know. I've serviced revolvers before, but thought this might be gone. At least with what you did here, I can restore it as a keepsake even if I never fire it again.
Again, many thanks.
Hope it turns out well!
My S n W j frame completely rusted about a year in. Never been 💥 🔫. Sent it back to them wish me luck.😏
i hope you were successful in your endeavor.
Now of to the range for firing and accuracy check.
@@topturretgunner Use LOW Power loads; at least at first
Saturdaynight special, love those guns!
Wow. you have certainly outdone me. I bought an old broken break top revolver for 130, but after stripping it, it was only missing one spring. You did a lot more work, and I loved watching it.
th-cam.com/video/c5lnmOqqfZg/w-d-xo.html
@@statusvideos2703 stop spamming that BS
Was it a iver Johnson pistol ?
@@rockyourbodywithbignastyho7315 Yep. Iver Johnson 3rd model hammerless.
@@hallofguns8174 I have one as well fantastic little piece of history cherish that gem thank you for the reply
Welcome to the “it’s late I really need to go to sleep” side of TH-cam
Pra comprar um é difícil
You've never seen an0nymoose
Glad I’m not the only one!
Lmao me right now
🙆🙆😫😫🙆🙋🙋🙋🙋🙋🙋🙋🙋🙋🙇🙋🙋🙋🙋😃😃
Another amazing video and restoration, thank you!
What surprised me the most, I think, was the complexity of a relatively "simple" gun. Who'd have thought there was so much in it?
Most people think that revolvers are simple guns but in fact they mostly have lots more moving parts than a SA pistol
Since I am a gunsmith, and have a personal love for wheel guns, I really appreciate this video. Great work. Looks like the cylinder lock-up is nice and tight.
How someone could let a firearm fall into such a sad state of disrepair is beyond me.
You go to Murray state?might of seen you pal.
Looks like the rust has been intentional/manufactured for the video
@@RJ-zm3tr hopefully thats not true, its horrible to think someone would purposely do that to such a nice gun
@@RJ-zm3tr indeed. acid can rust metal like this
@@RJ-zm3tr I thought the exact same thing, especially with the ease in which the outer layer of rust was removed. The pitting in the rifling and on the frame did not match the extreme level of rust. It's just clickbait.
this was relaxing to watch. no talking. just the sound of liquid and metal
@@restaurato6629 qq
Congratulations, for the excelent job. My father had an ASTRA, model Cadix 38 Spc. as personal protection gun, for decades. He got it at 60s. This revolver was his everyday concealed weapon.
Nice job! One of my favorite revolvers- a timeless classic and star of many detective shows.
Simply incredible that you are able to bring these things back to life or in some cases improving it. You’ve earned every subscription you have Sir, and mine too today. I have only seen a few of the precision processes, but the homemade electrolysis was my favorite. Amazing
Que buen trabajo excelente que lindo quedo felicitaciones hizo un trabajo
De lujo que lindo 38 especial
Great job. A real pleasure to watch. I was hoping for a chrome finish and maybe a pearl handle just to make the difference even more extreme but wow. Incredibly skillful gunsmith.
Lets see how many subs I can get from this comment
current:702
Brain - you should sleep, its late
Me - I wonder how to restore a revolver
😁
Do you have old to restore
@@munnatripathi8909 not me, I wish I still had those old guns 😲😭😭😭
@@restaurato6629 pra
p
I don’t mind watching these videos without talking some times the Guys talk to much.!
Jajajaja
Jajaaja
@@ayingsdud4929 dmj di BB a BB ca n jlh BB nk
K mm
Bmm di
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Yeah they turn into a bunch of girls and just doesn’t shut up 🤫
I had a similar experience restoring a 1911 once. Me and my wife spent the better part of a day in a bus station in Manila. I noticed a security guard with a rusty old gun. I love rusty old guns. I found out it was a family treasure from the war but wasn’t reliable. So as an amateur gunsmith I offered my help. After many hours of work waiting for our bus and working on the fly it was restored to it’s former glory. The look on his face when he test fired it was priceless. I got our tickets half price HAHAHA👍👍👍
You sir are a generous one and I applaud you for that
make a gunsmith channel. sounds nice. itd be nice if we had enough in the philippines because we have a lot of aging inventory.
@Aiden Tikalsky Huh, surprising that I havent heard the police mentioning that "terror attack"
Good job. It looks a lot like a S&W under the side plate.
I was thinking the same thing probably a (licensed?) copy made by Astra
Spanish Guns factories always made copies of America guns. That's because the spanish Copyright laws rules that to uphold your blueprints in Spain you should have factories in the country, and not every American gunmaker was interested in having factories there.
So it was easy to spanish gunmakers make perfect copies of American gunmakers and not having trouble with law.
@@ViniciusAMSilva didn’t know this legal aspect, and I always wondered why so many copies where made in Spain. Thanks!
@@stevailo Not licensed, Stolen rights. Only buy real Smith & Wesson firearms. The rest are junk.
Damn that revolver was really smooth looking for something covered in rust, you'd almost thing it was paint
This really warms my heart.
@Thomas Webb yes absolutely.
Really enjoyed this video! Nice that it had no talking, just explanatory captions when needed. I am an amateur smith myself and enjoy bringing old or damaged guns back to life. Did an old S&W revolver for a friend recently that also had excessive pitting, so I just polished what I could without removing serial numbers, etc, then cold blued it. Looked 90% better than before! Great job…subscribed! Wish you had a nice old Colt or S&W to do but they don’t come along in that kinda shape often, or are too expensive to start with.
Me too, lots of work went into this.
In spanish: Excelente trabajo de restauracion anuevo y aun mejor haz pulido, las rebabas de fabricacion de la fabrica, haz niquelado, mejorado todo!!! Excelente!! Felicitaciones de Argentina.
First gun I ever loaded and shot. My grandfather was a customs agent and he carried this back in the day until the end of his career where they were issued Glocks. Either way, this was awesome to watch regardless but it also took me back to some good times. Thanks for the upload.
,E
This reminds me of my toy gun when I was a kid, man we had the best stuff, that thing was actual steel like a real revolver.
I've got a steel .38 special paper cap revolver.
@@greatskytrollantidrama4473 nice, I remember those too mine looked much like this but the revolver thing pulled open to load the plastic ring caps.
YEP
Good job ! - I think I would at least , buffed' out, the trigger, and the cylinder, before blueing.
Video spettacolare, rilassante persino. Ed è sempre bello vedere un’arma salvata dalla ruggine. Tanto di cappello per il lavoro!
th-cam.com/video/c5lnmOqqfZg/w-d-xo.html
As promised I am here and you get a like. Thanks for posting. Awesome job nitrating it.
th-cam.com/video/c5lnmOqqfZg/w-d-xo.html
@@statusvideos2703 shut up
what a classic resto! bluing and wood grips. awesome job!
This would've been a perfect candidate for some cerakote or duracoat!! Although your method was really awesome too, I love the patina look to it. This really makes me want to find a worn out revolver to restore!
th-cam.com/video/1gVOqmvv0j4/w-d-xo.html
Plum brown would have been anachronistic but given the level of pitting I think it would have looked good. Awesome job on this revolver. Truly amazing.
DuraCoat more than Cerakote .
But a brushed or matte finish with electroless nickel would best deal with the pitting .
@@filianablanxart8305 why durakote over cerakote?
I’ve used cerakote, but haven’t tried anything else.
@@Daddy53751 I imeadately conceed that Cerakote is mostest bestest hard & durable finish . Dura Coat is very durable , but CeraKote even more .
But that said , there are still reasons to prefer Dura Coat , at least some of the time .
Cerakote has a good selection of color , Dura has huge selection . Dura works better for intricate multi color design . ( Not my thing , but some people do .)
But in this instance , Dura Coat will better fill in pits , while the physically thiner CeraKote will exactly conform to the host , pits and all .
Muito top esse revolver, incrível restauração
Que trabajo magnifico, eres un genio 😉👍. Saludos desde Argentina 🇦🇷.
Sou do Brasil, e estou vidrado com a excelência do trabalho que faz, é algo mágico, inspirador, minha super admiração! abraços do Brasil.
👍
@@restaurato6629 Is that CLR you used to remove rust?
Opa eu também sou do Brasil hahahaha
Time dos brasileiros
Só queria saber o nome desse produto aí que ele jogou msm kkkkkkkkk
Excellent restoration! The chemical bluing turned out very well, I'm glad you did that instead of the wipe-on bluing that is actually an oxidized copper that does nothing to protect the metal. You clearly have talent for restoring firearms and I can't wait to see what you do next!
No sé en qué es ud mejor amigo, si es química o como Armero. De todas las formas es Ud un verdadero maestro en su arte. Mis respetos!
Thanks for taking my word on the NaOH. I wish more people would do it that way and you did not disappoint! Well done!
Why not just call it salt.
NaCl is table salt. NaOH is sodium hydroxide, or lye.
Great job bringing that nice little piece back to life! You have skills and patience.
Finalmente l'algoritmo di TH-cam mi consiglia qualcosa di interessante.✌🏻 E siamo pure conterranei ❤
It's a beautiful thing when you can take a rusty brick and transform it back into a functional tool again!!!!
ะ
@@toomtamft1330 '.
L..
Hjfhsdghfm
T😚😋
I love you’re work. I do restoration’s on vintage guitars so I know the effort involved in your craft. The guys that give their opinions on how you ‘should have’ done things is hilarious. Where are their videos?
@@restaurato6629 jko
I cringed at the side plate removal .
Traditional rust blueing was a thing of beauty on 19th century arms . And an interesting process to document for its own sake.
But for a gun with modern steels , in that starting condition , professional grade Cold Blueing would give more even coloring , and a more durable finish .
Yes , I've done it to zero finish remaining duty revolvers , but it was before the era of the internet , or affordable digtal cameras .
Cool work. I couldn’t do that. Only thing I would recommend is replacing the coil springs. The hot blue process could weaken them.
Beautiful. I love these restoration videos. Keep making them!
Brazil is in da House
Great restoration. I did something similar and instead of blueing, I used flat black wood stove paint. Don't make faces guys. Guns have been painted for MANY years. For an old gun, especially one with some rough surfaces, a very durable paint such as engine block or wood stove, comes out looking pretty good and can fill in some of the pitting.
Mãe
Or engine paint
You have a great collection of guns
Impressive restoration...and you have a slick style of shooting your videos...respect !
I could watch these all day. Reminds of younger days when I had patience! Now, not so much. Keep-em coming!👍...
If you're like so many people, not only does the loss of patience come with age, but so many of us have had our brains rewired by computers and the internet. I have some patience remaining, but focus and concentration are long gone.
thank you also for showing us how to restore them as well!
Right on... a real bluing, made me tingle! Great job on the resto!
th-cam.com/video/c5lnmOqqfZg/w-d-xo.html
That’s a very nice restoration job. The interesting thing will be to see how easily the ammo will load into the cylinders and how easy the fired cases will eject for the cylinder.
Probably could do with a good hone and polish to the cylinders.
@@MrSterling314: Judging by what the rifling looked like, I personally would have bored and re-sleeved the barrel. Hone and polish is a good idea, just don't over do and make a sloppy fit.
@@d.s.steele3100 yup. Or just rebarrel it. But yeah don't wanna make those chambers oversized lol.
Also the fact that he did zero polishing or any attempt to remove pitting at all annoys me. How can you call this a 'restoration' when all you did was reblue it lol.
But whatever, it makes a popular video I guess lol.
@@MrSterling314: I think he might have been going for a patina look. If so a new barrel (if one can be found) would look out of place. That is the reason I suggested a re-sleeve. That way it could be fired safely, but keep as many original parts as possible.
@@d.s.steele3100 Can't tell until you test it . Sometimes ugly bores will give good accuracy .
once rust settles in, it's very difficult to restore the gun to a bright luster. Hai delle mani d'oro! Peccato che in Italia ci siamo tante restrizioni con le armi. Qui negli Stati Uniti, armieri come te, sono difficili da trovare, sopratutto quelli che hanno la passione!! Grazie dei tuoi video!!!
Grazie per il tuo commento amico mio 👏
Nice job. I’d like to know more about the bluing setup and chemicals
I read that when cleaning the muzzle it's good to follow the direction of the bullet (from inside to outside) and only go in that direction (pass the entire brush through the barrel, handle and everything).
Thank you for this very satisfying video :)
You’re supposed to clean from the breech end because if you go from the muzzle you risk messing up the crown
th-cam.com/play/OLAK5uy_k5rJC3McIQiTaLh3qLCuj0TCMjTVTzQDw.html
Heard that same thing several time when I was a small boy.In 1958 while in the Army I asked our company warrant officer that ran small arms repair if that were true.He said that he did not think so and he had never seen anything in writing that said to do it that way,Years later I asked another small arms expert the same question,got the same answer.Both those men were experts in weapons up to about 155 caliber some I think that might be an urban legend.
Kerja bagus ,saya suka lihat prosesnya , teliti dengan hasi.memuaskan 👍👍👍👍👍
It looks great I like the rough look gives the gun character and looks perfect with the wood grips.
I wish there were more videos like this on TH-cam I feel like it’s a good thing to pull in views and not a lot of people are doing it like seriously hardly anyone is doing this
There are many videos like this on YT.
Fake restoration channels like this one are pulling in a lot of views.
Loved the restoration. Wish gun laws were lenient in India. Fan of vintage guns.
I never knew how complicated the cleaning and restoration of a fire arm was. (The end product is a beaut by the way )
ko
It might not be factory condition, but it’s a damn sight better now than before
Also a damn sight better than no gun...
th-cam.com/video/c5lnmOqqfZg/w-d-xo.html
@@statusvideos2703 why you keep send this link?
I paused the video at 7:51 and then waited for 48 hours before resuming the video. The results were truly amazing!
Bravo! Great restoration. I've an old Browning Hi Power that I want restore. You've given me inspiration to go and do it. Thanks!
Este Sr. a pesar de ser mudo hace buen trabajo, felicitaciones.
Y q tiene q ver lo mudo con el talento
@@juanveliz7552 é porque ele não fala nada no vídeo, kkkkkkkk
Buenas noches caballero si me podría ayudar o recomendar que liquido es para que quite toda esa corrosión lo que lo echa primero gracias estaré ala espera de su respuesta que Dios le bendiga a este canal
Laser rust removal the next one 💪🏽
th-cam.com/video/c5lnmOqqfZg/w-d-xo.html
deep fried revolver... my favorite!!
احب الفيديوهات الي نفس كذا 👍🏻
if this was me, after a 24 hour soak i would be like, this is fine, restoration finished \o/
The reason it looks good was because it was rusted by him and was fine before hand
hahaha, yes, me too. Plus all the parts would have broken off for me
1
mpKNJNy
@@JohnWard-em1qi probly sprayed it with lite coat of primer and then soaked it in acetone
Hey, those were pretty good revolvers!
You are the best restorer!👍👍👍
Here in UK I restore mostly old air rifles and pistols, striking up a rusty one is hard work, it's nice to sit back for a change, excellent work, love snub nosed revolvers
Great job!!! I love the .38 spcl. Very cool!
Just the rest remover does so much it is crazy I like to know what kind of rust remover you use man because it is top of the line
I supporting you from India bro I am an indian :)
th-cam.com/video/c5lnmOqqfZg/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/c5lnmOqqfZg/w-d-xo.html
good idea bro the best
That’s some nice support from India
Pakistan is in the bag!
Wow! I stumbled across this by accident. After 1min I was hitting the Subscribe button.
Incredible!
Parabéns , sou seu fã ! 💗💓💓💓
I do love it when a firearm is given new life!
I have got an Old Shotgun that was Damaged in a friends House fire he gave it too me said do whatever with it the gun is Badly Damaged is it possible to have it restored it can't shoot i would like to have it restored its a Pump Shotgun a Remington Model 10
@@dallasmay4031 I'm sure it can be. You will definitely need to replace the furniture though.
@@jared.p240 alight i just need to know what chemicals and mixtures to use so i can clean it off and then have a specialist take it part and replace the damaged parts because i have no clue how to do that
@@dallasmay4031 I wish I could tell you which chemicals to use, but you should definitely do that. Hopefully you can get this thing working again!🙂
Popping shows,love your passion.ACAB ,🇨🇦💯
Awesome job! This revolver seems to be very similar to the Smith&Wesson model 36 snub nose.
Astra cadix .38 cal.
Its a Spanish Astra Cadix Cal. .38
I like those clicking sounds
More guns please!! Great work
Still looks pretty rough, but it's been given new life and should be solid and reliable
@@restaurato6629 It's a good car gun. Just put it in the trunk or wherever and you don't need to worry about the finish.
Well it's not hard work, but it's tedious and time consuming work. This is enjoyable work though. I love restoration.
I tuoi video sono unici! Bellissimi lavori.
wow barely any pitting after rust removal. very nice
i dont think it was rusty for very long
He made it rust just so he could make a video on it
Well, you just got my subscription. However, I missed the entry of head-banging heavy metal, eye-popping optics and then a guy that goes on for ten minutes before coming to task.
Fantastic, really enjoyed, thanks
The Cadix line of pistols are (fairly good) S&W clones built by Spanish company Astra between 1958 and 1973. good work resurrecting this piece of history
Fascinating!
Looks like a charter arms, whom I love. I do this with every old gun I buy, no surprises.
At first which liquid did you use for removing rust
@@TimeToBeKind okay.. But tell me the procedure to use and result will be same as this?
@@gautam-fe7sk … I use a polyurethane planter with one gallon of vinegar and half cup of dish soap. It removed the rust but depending on how the rust is. I only work on Mauser with surface rust, not pitted. Then I sand it smooth with 400 wet sandpaper, then OOOO steel wool before bluing.
I feel like this would be something cool to do with my dad, wish he would
Xnxx
@Tank Hankerous what a novel idea man, why didn’t I think of that one?
Wow. What an incredible improvement.
A beautiful restoration, I enjoyed it.
Definitely wasnt thrown in a river/junkyard to get rid of any evidence 😁
Nice. I like heartwarming stories. Looks like it will forever have fun acne scars. But looks good!
👏👏👏 nice job restoring it
Great video!
Where did you get spare parts from?
These Astra pistols are Smith & Wesson clones and are quite high quality.
With your permission, a tip regarding proper operation of a revolver:
Never slam shut-close the cylinder. Always press the release button, insert the cylinder and then release the button for locking.
Take care!
Nicely done 👍👍✅
Amazing. I can't wait to see more restorations.
Looks great! I wouldn't recommend dry firing a revolver like that though.
Why? It’s center fire. What’s the problem?
The chances of breaking the floating firing pin aren't great , but are both greater than zero , and greater than with a hammer mounted firing pin .
But to be extra cautious , just use some snap caps ( dummy cartridges , with rubber-ish material in position of the primer , to cushion the hammer/ firing pin fall. Available commercially both plastic and aluminum) .
The guy just gave that rusty, crusty revolver a new life.... He can dry fire that thing all he wants.
@@seanflynn2289 agreed!
Really enjoyed the video, was a plus there was no annoying music in the background nor high speed filming.
Great work! If I looked at that, I would’ve been tempted to throw it back in the river!
Nah all guns deserve a second chance, they are becoming a endangered species with joe biden in office so we must treat them all with respect
Srsly!? If I found a gun I would 110% be keeping it
@@wylieisnothere5062 It's kinda funny you said something like that. We have more guns than people in America. He might want to make them endangered but it ain't gonna happen.
@@bertroost1675 exactly, come and take it