Cheese
Member
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2015
- Messages
- 12,521
Michael Kellough said:“Stripped and oiled”
Long time ago when just starting out with no money I’d go to garage sales religiously to find good quality old tools that didn’t look good anymore so I could buy them cheap. I’d clean the rust off with a wire wheel and wipe the whole thing (handle and all) with plain old boiled linseed oil and set it aside to dry for a few days. Most of that stuff now stays in an unheated metal shed less than a mile from the NY harbor and they haven’t acquired any new rust in the decades since oiled.
That's funny but interesting.
Your first statement really rang true with me...the no money issue...we've all been there and it immediately brings me back to my 1958 Chevy Impala 348 with 3 deuces. Having no pesos and needing new hydraulic lifters, I decided my only viable choice was to clean and rebuild the existing lifters. Unfortunately, ignorance is bliss so I happily proceeded to disassemble all 16 lifters, clean all the parts in a single batch and that's when I found out that each part was originally paired up with its mating part. Well it took me a week to finally find which parts mated with each other.
I digress, thanks for that [member=297]Michael Kellough[/member] as I mentioned, I do like the color and the rawness of the cast iron/steel surfaces on Will-Burt but am not sure how well it will maintain its "Good Looks" when exposed to humidity and my acidic paws. Also, working with Will-Burt today, my hands became slightly oily but more on the black, dirty side. I have qualms about accidentally transferring that combo to the wood surfaces I'm working with.
Does the boiled linseed oil ever "Dry"?