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bowhunter-tw

Need Marlin 336CS JM help!

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I just picked up a 336 from 1995, the gun looks to be in great shape, the bluing looks great with no signs of rust, but when wiped with hoppes oil the white paper towel comes out looking like there is a layer if rust? (See pictures) how can I remove this layer completely? Or do I leave it alone since I cant see it?

image.jpg

image.jpg

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Hoppes oil or Hoppes solvent? I am thinking that you are using solvent on the exterior of that rifle. Hoppes solvent is not recommended for blued gun surfaces. 

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Did you use the solvent first? That would explain what is happening. I don’t specifically recall how you neutralize solvent but break free  or WD-40 would probably do it. You want to get all the solvent off the blued surfaces then apply a thin coat of oil. I typically only use oil to clean and protect blued surfaces. 

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Ive used hoppes #9 to  wipe down barrels and actions on shotguns, then wiped them down with oil. Ive seen the color before but if you look at #9 its the same color.

I still have the shotguns today some are 50 years old

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I dont think im going to worry too much, the rust color come off whether is use the high precision hoppes oil, gun bore cleaner, or shooters choice fp-10 clp. The gun looks pretty good other wise. (Need to replace loading gate screw, left out on purpose)

image.jpg

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one thing to think about #9 is that try to keep it off the wood especially Remington 1100 forearms. its real thin in some areas and the old saying was it will split the wood there. Dads older skeet and trap buddies always had that complaint about the 1100s back in the 60's. they always brought that up when I was cleaning mine after a shoot at the rod and gun clubs. I assumed it was all wood

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7 minutes ago, Delw said:

one thing to think about #9 is that try to keep it off the wood especially Remington 1100 forearms. its real thin in some areas and the old saying was it will split the wood there. Dads older skeet and trap buddies always had that complaint about the 1100s back in the 60's. they always brought that up when I was cleaning mine after a shoot at the rod and gun clubs. I assumed it was all wood

Good to know, I typically try to keep all my oils away from the wood on my guns, but I will keep an eye on the no. 9 specifically.

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 #9 meaning the solvent not on the wood.

the oils I dont think would be a problem but I could be wrong

Thats wood on the butt stock is nice

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11 hours ago, bowhunter-tw said:

What oil or protective coating do you recommend for blued finished? From the description on the bottle I thought the no. 9 was sufficient for preserving/protecting the blue.

Frog Lube or WD40 Specialist.

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On mine I use rem oil and other brands what ever I happen to fine at the time I need it ;) one thing I do buy because of the brand is sweets 7.62 and hoppes #9 for solvents. obviously the sweets is for inside the rifled barrels and the hoppes is for shotgun bores, actions, bolts, fire control groups etc etc and I also run it After I run the sweets in the rifled bores. 

Since most of my shotguns and rifles are safe queens They get greased once a year with frog lube(only have used this for about 2 years I think now) or this real thin grease I bought in the 90's from randals I forget the name but its old school Ill check on it when I get home late tonight if I remember. I have had a hard time finding it locally but I saw they still made it.. it comes off really nice when you want to use the firearm. frogs looked to be a tad heavier than this stuff.

 

 

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I use 4 ought steel wool or brass wool same grade to remove light surface rust. Montana cleaning solvents and pledge or fl it z gun wax on blues guns.

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5 minutes ago, Jlreff said:

I use 4 ought steel wool or brass wool same grade to remove light surface rust. Montana cleaning solvents and pledge or fl it z gun wax on blues guns.

Would you use brass wool even if there isnt any visual indication of rust? The gun looks deep blue but a white paper towel shows different?

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