Hey there Hide,
So I recently impulse-purchased a McMillan A4 from their Ready-to-Ship section, knowing full well that I wasn't suuuper convinced by the transition paintjob it came in - but it had all the features I wanted in the inlet I wanted, so I figured what's the harm.
Once it showed up, my suspicion was confirmed and I didn't waste any time dropping it off with my local cerakote shop to give it a classic green makeover.
When I picked the stock back up, I noticed some pretty egregious surface blemishes that I hadn't noticed when the stock first showed up (see pictures).
My question for you:
Is there some sort of incompatibility between the Cerakote process and McMillan fibreglass stocks that I wasn't aware of and I did this to myself, or was there a QC issue with the stock that I didn't see when I received it?
If I don't want to ship it back to McMillan to fix, how would you recommend going about fixing the blemishes, if at all?
So I recently impulse-purchased a McMillan A4 from their Ready-to-Ship section, knowing full well that I wasn't suuuper convinced by the transition paintjob it came in - but it had all the features I wanted in the inlet I wanted, so I figured what's the harm.
Once it showed up, my suspicion was confirmed and I didn't waste any time dropping it off with my local cerakote shop to give it a classic green makeover.
When I picked the stock back up, I noticed some pretty egregious surface blemishes that I hadn't noticed when the stock first showed up (see pictures).
My question for you:
Is there some sort of incompatibility between the Cerakote process and McMillan fibreglass stocks that I wasn't aware of and I did this to myself, or was there a QC issue with the stock that I didn't see when I received it?
If I don't want to ship it back to McMillan to fix, how would you recommend going about fixing the blemishes, if at all?