Thanks, Ron. Removing the lettering will be the first step in a whole rebuild of the GPR and will include reshaping the stock, browning the barrel, etc etc..
I know it will always be a GPR, but it will also be my first experience with developing some of the gun building techniques I will need for future projects of a more ambitious nature. Plus, it will be 'my' GPR when it is complete, not the factory's!
Get a 4 ounce ball pean hammer and highly polish the ball and face. 400 or 600 grit will usually work OK
Use this, usually just the ball, to pean all the letters you want to remove. On and around them, LIGHT BLOWS. This will slowly close them up.
Many, many light strokes. Start with the lightest stamping preferably something isolated like 1-2 numbers pean them pretty well closed and then file these to see how it works. Then try the deeper ones. Which from the look of it are going to be nearly impossible to irradicate.
But REALLY. My advice is to keep the GPR as it is and invest in some parts and make a rifle from a precarve and a GREEN MOUNTAIN barrel..
This is a better investment of time.
Dan
Dan -
Thanks for the advice on peening the letters before filing. I understand how you and others can feel that this is not a worthwhile investment in my time, but I think it will be. I pretty much have to refinish the barrel anyway, because I purchased the gun from a fellow across the country and he did not indicate before the sale in photos or in description some damage to the metal near the end of the barrel. He was not responsive to me expressing disappointment in the transaction either so I am stuck with a GPR that would not sell for the same price as what I paid for it (not that I got totally fleeced either, because I did not).
Plus, with an ill father on the other side of the continent that I need to visit, funds are not available at present for buying parts for a fresh Hawken build of my own. So rebuilding a GPR it will be! I figure that the worst that can happen is that I bungle on one of the finer points of the rebuild and then I'll have a beater Hawken to go wilderness deer hunting with (which is what I will be using this for however it turns out).
So come on fellows, I know a Lyman GPR is not as classy as parts gathered from more prestigious component makers, but with some good effort on my part and some helpful advice on your part I think I can come up with something I can be proud to own and proud to pass on.
Ron B - Yes, we all need to start somewhere! Fortunately the Lyman GPR that I have already has a barrel with a twist designed for round balls.
Now I just need to find some detailed images of Hawken rifles to use as a guide for my rebuild..