Damaged Rem 700 BDL Forearm

splatman

New member
I used some paint/epoxy remover while refinishing a stock on a
Remington 700 BDL. I thought the tip
Of the forearm was painted black but it's
Actually solid material which was partially
Eaten by the paint/epoxy remover. Any ideas
On how to fix the problem. Thanks!
 
You could sand it down until the blemish goes away and sand the rest of the end cap to give it an even contour. That's the easiest solution I can think of

Without seeing it I don't know if the blemish is too deep for that to work or not
 
.

Most likely what's eaten away is just the epoxy finish on the black forend tip.

Sand it off/smooth, as advised above, & refinish it.




.
 
The edge of the black material where it meets the
Wood has been eaten away about a sixteenth
Of an inch. What about coating the end with
Bedding compound and then sanding and
Polishing?
 
.

If it's that bad, it's probably easiest & cheapest to slice off the forarm tip @ the joint & make a new one.

If there's a Woodworker's Warehouse or other woodworking store near you, a small block of Ebony can be had for around $20.
If nothing's nearby, try online woodworking hobbyist suppliers.



.
 
Lots of cheap take off stocks on e-bay, gunbroker etc., where people have replaced factory stocks with aftermarket stocks. That, or use this as an excuse to get a better aftermarket stock yourself.
 
Quote:
What about coating the end with Bedding compound and then sanding and Polishing
The color of the epoxy will almost never be an exact match.
An observation: Years ago, true Ebony wood was available. However, for many years, real Ebony has been supplanted with faux ebony, a much softer (but still a hardwood), wood (walnut I think), that has been soaked in a penetrating black stain to look like ebony. The sellers often would not identify it as not true ebony and charged as if it were. Nevertheless, my observation has been that those dyed hardwood pieces still showed varying shades throughout, not uniformly black like ebony was. Those faux ebony pieces were sold and used for forend tips. Therefore, if the bedding compound's color (black), did not match the Remington's plastic forend cap perfectly, it would be on par with those fake ebony forend caps.
 
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