• You are using the old Black Responsive theme. We have installed a new dark theme for you, called UI.X. This will work better with the new upgrade of our software. You can select it at the bottom of any page.

Polished Ruger MK II Target

Status
Not open for further replies.
Joined
Jan 8, 2011
Messages
10,484
So, I have a Ruger MK II that I bought 15 years ago. It's brushed stainless finish was showing some wear marks. Since I really like mirror polished stainless guns and have a few factory ones of another make, I decided to polish out my Ruger to give it that look. I wrapped it up today. All the bling was tough to capture with a camera.:D
 

Attachments

  • ruger 004.jpg
    ruger 004.jpg
    271.6 KB · Views: 38
  • ruger 005.jpg
    ruger 005.jpg
    270.8 KB · Views: 34
I disassembled it to leave me with just the stripped barrel/receiver. I did all of the polishing with a bench mounted buffer that has 8" wheels. I used Eastwood stainless steel polish on a sewn cotton wheel to do most of the cutting. That actually brought it out to a nice shine. I did a final buff with a loose cotton wheel using white rouge.

The barrel/receiver was the easier part. It didn't really have any bad machine marks in it. The frame was a whole different story. I guess since it is stamped, the actually stamping puts marks almost like ridges that run from front to back in the piece. Getting those polished down smooth took a bit of work.

I guess buying equipment for one gun doesn't make sense, but I already had it. I bought it years ago to polish out stainless and aluminum Harley parts. I've used it on other guns, though. I have a revolver that I mirror polished the cylinder on and then polished the frame out to a bright brushed finish. I also have a Remingto 700BDL that I just had reblued. I did the polishing and then had it dipped. It looked like chrome before the blue dip. The gunsmith that did the blueing seemed impressed with the shine I was able to put on the gun.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top