Polish stainless steel revolver

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I don't know how many times I am going to click on this thread thinking I am going to see a stainless steel revolver from Poland....:oops:
 
I use Never Dull on my 686 and 5906 now and then, also polished the 686 with Flitz last winter. Only use Never Dull on 5906 with satin finish, it also cleans crud out of the slide and grip serrations
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Ok. Used mothers mag polish and a dremal. The matte finish is not tuff at at all. One or two laps will bring out a bare stainless look. More will start to show a very shiny finish. It’s so easy to shine up I did the cylinder with just a rag and no mother’s while watching tv for a couple of hours. The matte finish did hide a few machine marks though. Anyway if this is something you’ve thought about it’s a fairly easy thing to do.
 
For flat surfaces I use a wood block with a piece of leather glued to it.
Mothers on that piece of leather makes a great way to polish flat surfaces.
It's great for keeping you knives sharp too.
 
i took apart my stainless steel uberti cattle man saa and took out every visible machine mark on it. then i polishes it on a wheel on my drill press with the white stick polish from the hard ware store. the cylinder is stainless but of a different stronger kind than the rest of the handgun. so i spun it and polished it as high as i could then sent it off to be nickle plated which didnt cost much at all and now the cylinder matches the rest of the gun. change the trigger spring to a piano wire spring, redid the forcing cone and took the varnish off the grips and oil rubbed then and soft glow polished them on the buffing wheel. the gun is beautiful and will take a snakes head off at 20 yards to point of aim. as you can tell i like a highly polished revolver also.
 
i took apart my stainless steel uberti cattle man saa and took out every visible machine mark on it. then i polishes it on a wheel on my drill press with the white stick polish from the hard ware store. the cylinder is stainless but of a different stronger kind than the rest of the handgun. so i spun it and polished it as high as i could then sent it off to be nickle plated which didnt cost much at all and now the cylinder matches the rest of the gun. change the trigger spring to a piano wire spring, redid the forcing cone and took the varnish off the grips and oil rubbed then and soft glow polished them on the buffing wheel. the gun is beautiful and will take a snakes head off at 20 yards to point of aim. as you can tell i like a highly polished revolver also.
Sounds beautiful, can we see a photo of it?
 
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