I do a lot of Duracoating of 10/22 barrels that I sell, and I agree that the prep work is everything. When I first started using Duracoat, I didn't yet have a blast cabinet, so I would just make sure that the parts were spotless and free of contaminants. It took me about 3 times redoing the same barrel before I bought a blast cabinet. I also started using disposable water trap filters on everything (very humid down here in the south). I have a big water/oil trap on my compressor, but when I would use an air nozzle to blow off a part after blasting, the freaking thing would actually blow water out of the end. I now run disposable traps on my air nozzle, a disposable trap as well as a desiccant filter on my blast cabinet pigtail and I even built a pigtail for my spray guns with 3 different traps on it. It may seem like overkill and look a bit silly, but after having to completely redo (blast, prep, and re-spray) a batch of 6 barrels, I learned my lesson. And cured duracoat is a PITA to blast off. It takes me 5-10 minutes to blast the factory finish off of a barrel, took me about 45 minutes each to blast the duracoat off.