Picked up a remington that had part of the stock painted over original finish. Any way to remove the paint without damaging the underlying finish? It has the factory polyurethane finish.
Thanks
Thanks
Scotch brite it off then polishPicked up a remington that had part of the stock painted over original finish. Any way to remove the paint without damaging the underlying finish? It has the factory polyurethane finish.
Thanks
Yes, but it depends on what was painted over it. Some paints might be as tough or more so than the original, while Krylon will probably come off pretty well with scotchbrite and laquer thinner or similar.Scotch brite it off then polish
He's probably got checkering he'd like to save.I'd contact @Bc'z!!
If there is one person that knows about paint & finish on a wood stock, it's him!
Sandpaper most definitely.Sandpaper, a case of beer and a free weekend.
Not sure how me recommending to get your advice leads to him wanting to save his checkering???He's probably got checkering he'd like to save.
Not sure how me recommending to get your advice leads to him wanting to save his checkering???![]()
Sorry for the loss on your rifle, I don't miss any of my existing either.
Let me clarify my answer
I don't like working with checkering, its just.not my cup of tea. I've done a checkered job only once and learned.
OP is wanting to save original finish but remove only the spray paint.
Again I don't have time nor patience to attempt this.
I'd use my DA sander and some 80 grit paper and remove everything in about an hour including checkering, then start over.

