With the terrible finish stripped off, the wood on the Mosin is actually in very good shape. I used my iron and a rag to steam out the few dents that were there. I've got my wood stripped, sanded, clean, and ready for stain.
As I mentioned previously, I don't like wood. I also don't like the color brown. It's my least favorite color. That left me with a problem since these guns come with brown wood stocks. I couldn't go with red either, because I'm colorblind and unless it's a bright red, it looks brown to me, which I don't like. I considered bleaching the wood to a light blond, but it's discolored enough that I wasn't sure how well it would bleach. So I decided to go dark. Ebony dark. I used a Min-Wax oil-based stain. I chose oil based because this stock will still weep cosmoline for years to come and it shouldn't affect an oil based stain. Only after starting to stain did I discover that Min-Wax has a reputation as the worst stain on the market. Consequently, my stock is dark brown instead of black. If I were to do it again, I'd use a better brand. It's a bit lighter in the pic than real life because of the flash.
To finish my finish, I chose Birchwood-Casey's Tru-oil. It's mostly boiled linseed oil with some other additives, and is about the most popular gun stock finish on the planet. It takes a day or so to dry well enough to sand and over the course of a month or so, I did the oil, let dry, sand, repeat routine. This fills the grain, leaving a nice smooth surface.
After many many coats of Tru-Oil, I decided that I had enough build up(since most of it got sanded off between coats it's not very thick). I did my final sanding wet with 1500 grit paper, then polished with regular automotive polishing compound. The Tru-Oil buffs up very easily. I know what you're thinking, battle rifles shouldn't be shiny. But you know who's rifle this is? Mine. :)
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