I have a walnut stocked ohio rifle-original, that needs some TLC and I need some oil for the stock. Is there something that goes faster than straight boiled linseed?? Somebody recommeded danish oil mixed with linseed? Waht do you think??
Andy A
Don't bother with lumber yard boiled linseed oil or "stand oil" etc. BLO as it comes from the store is NOT GUNSTOCK FINISH. Its not even heated when the driers are added.
Buy something like Chambers oil finish.
The rifle was probably finished with a linseed oil varnish originally.
There were essentially two types of varnish in the old days.
Spirit varnish and oil varnishes. If it dried with a shine it was varnish. Old varnish finished gunstocks that still have finish will show just how flexible and elastic these finishes were. The finish generally will not break even if dented unless the dent is created by a sharp object that cuts the finish. Many times the finish conforms to the dent. But few people take the time to REALLY look. The varnishes used on musical instruments were harder but was also much more expensive and tended to be too hard for rough service.
Almost all American gunstocks were finished with a LINSEED OIL BASED VARNISH or BLO until the arrival of synthetics.
They boiled in resins to make a varnish.
I would use home cooked Linseed oil and Grumbachers Oil Painting Medium III (a soft oil varnish) mixed about 50-50. But you are probably better served with something like Chambers oil mixed with the Grumbachers mentioned above. It will produce a soft varnish that is very weather resistant. Will tolerate months of snow and rain with no change. Dries fast etc. The Grumbachers is available where oil painting supplies are sold.
The only other traditional finish is something like real shellac or another spirit finish.
The alternative is something like Permalyn which is just a modern plastic finish.
Most rot on gunstocks is the result of too much rust preventative oil in most cases. It really WILL soften wood and many people used to use petroleum oil on the wood and over oil metal parts so the wood gets wood soaked.
A great many British firearms have been oiled with linseed at least once a year for long periods without rotting the stocks but they did not buy the stock finish oil from Home Depot.
Dan