OK what a night. Very exciting.
Here's what I did.... And then I'll tell you what I think I should have done.
What I did:
Did the controls first, frame second, slide third.
1. Put on gloves.
2. Set half a gallon of distilled water to boil. 3. Removed from acetone and used an air compressor to blow parts dry.
4. Mark Lee instructions say to heat the metal to 150 to 200 degrees with a propane torch and then apply the solution. I tried with my heat gun. It was far too slow. I used a propane torch but my temp gun wouldn't read it very well.
5. Applied solution with a wool dauber and q-tip
6. Repeated steps 4 and 5 two more times
7. Dropped parts in boiling water for 5 minutes
8. Removed from water and immediately blew the parts dry with my air compressor
9. Carded it.
Issues I ran into:
1. I heated up the metal too much. I knew because as soon as I applied the solution it flash boiled on the metal. This caused the solution to essentially harden and raise up a bit on the surface rather than glide smoothly on it. Oops.
2. I applied too much bluing solution. I consciously used very little and it still was too much. It dripped quite a bit on the floor if it gives you any sense of how much I applied. I needed to dip and blot against the sides of the container more.
3. Overall these things caused a non-uniform application however I don't know it that made a difference.
4. I did 3 different boilings. I separated them out. The water was still clear after the controls. However after the frame it was very brown. I didn't change the water and just dropped the slide in. If I had done them all at once they would have had clea water to boil in. Not sure if it would have made a difference but it does remove one more possible area for error.
Questions. What are these black spots that don't seem to be going away after carding.
Did I do it correctly?
Do I need to redo it? Evaporust and the re-blue?








