Norm,
Your rifle is looking great. What was your procedure for finishing your brass? I have a buttplate that is pretty rough to tart with. I would like to hear how you found to do it as yours looks great. Thanks and good luck.
elkhorne
Elkhorne,
I'm no expert at filing brass, and as a result I still try various techniques as I go along. This also means that I don't always remember what I did!!
For the butt plate, I started off using a technique that DaveC2 had posted some time ago. I scraped the back of the plate to get the casting frost off. I just scraped it lightly, trying not to create flat spots. I may have then gone with a small mill file, but with a lighter touch. I think after that I used 100 grit sandpaper, then down to about 220 or 325.
For the butt plate return, I first filed off the decorative bands that were cast into the plate because they were not what I wanted. I then used a jewelers saw to make the two small lines (one of which terminates the 5 flats on the return). I made the groove with a cheap round needle file, probably from Track of the Wolf.
I then cleaned up the casting frost on the flats first with a 6 inch Nicholson mill file, trying to keep good corners. After that, I either went to about 150 grit paper, or straight to my Gesswein 320 Oil Treated stone (see Acer's lock filing tutorial).
This butt plate was from Track, and I find their brass to be fairly hard. This plate filed up much better than the last Track one I did, but I think that is just because the other was the first butt plate I ever filed.
The trigger guard was a combination of screwing it up entirely and then fixing it. I had filed flats on the front finial, which was wrong. So I then aggressively filed them off and filed it to match the wood, forgetting that I needed to make that triangle at the base of the bow.
For the bow, I used mostly the same 6 inch file, or maybe even a wider 12 inch mill file to give it that ridge down the middle. Then I went straight to the stones and 220 and 325 grit.
I have also recently discovered the use of a gray scotch brite pad, which evens out the finish without giving it a bunch of shine. I used it like a buffer.
I did use small needle files around bends and to clean up corners. My needle files are run of the mill cheap ones you buy in a set. Some of them are quite coarse, but a few are a bit more fine. I've found that if I use light pressure and use the file like sandpaper it works pretty well. Probably not good for the files, but they are pretty cheap.
Wish I had the magic solution, but I'm still working on my process. It still takes me a long long time to file steel and brass, although I am getting quicker.
Last thing, there are a few voids in the butt plate around the back side of the return. I will probably leave those there as I am led to believe that many originals had the same. I have seen at least one that does.
I hope that all helps, or gives you something to try!
cheers,
Norm