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Maybe but some of us still indulge and I have yet to scare the finish when using leather.Yup. Unless it's a super low volume barrel like a hunting gun, cerakoting is a waste of time and money.
It's very hard to protect the finish even with good preparation and tools. I have used leather , painters tape, cardstock, wood bushings and a few others with just about every barrel vise out there and its not worth the hassle.
Yup. Unless it's a super low volume barrel like a hunting gun, cerakoting is a waste of time and money.
It's very hard to protect the finish even with good preparation and tools. I have used leather , painters tape, cardstock, wood bushings and a few others with just about every barrel vise out there and its not worth the hassle.
first chip you put in it hurts a little, after that idgaf.Until that rifle slides down a rock, like what happened to my cerakoted hunting barrel
If I was to do it all over again, I would skip the cerakote even on my hunting rifle/barrel.
Of the limited pieces of good advice my father told me growing up...I distinctly recall the one he said, "Anytime you get something new, find a spot somewhere out of sight and hit it with a hammer. Then when dings & scratches show up you won't be as bothered, because it was already dinged!"first chip you put in it hurts a little, after that idgaf.
I could give or take the coating on hunting barrel but I can at understand it.
first chip you put in it hurts a little, after that idgaf.
I could give or take the coating on hunting barrel but I can at understand it.
Never done it intentionally, but I distinctly remember my first new car (cheap 83 Chevy Cavalier). Was in the dealer lot transferring stuff from old (74 Vega) to new opened the vega's door right into the side of the new one, waited until I got home to throw a temper tantrum.Of the limited pieces of good advice my father told me growing up...I distinctly recall the one he said, "Anytime you get something new, find a spot somewhere out of sight and hit it with a hammer. Then when dings & scratches show up you won't be as bothered, because it was already dinged!"![]()
LET THE RUSTO FLOOOOOOWWWWWWWI'm one of those that considers a rifle a tool - don't really care if they get dinged up.
But watching my rifle slide down a rock face and deeply scratching a new cerakoted barrel was rough
I just covered the scratches in black sharpie and carried on. But it was a good reminder why cerakoting a barrel is a waste of money. If you want a pretty museum piece - cerakote it. If you want a tool, just leave it stainless.