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comment_4136743

I’m having a problem with rust on the breach and ejectors I clean the gun regularly so can’t understand this I keep my guns in the loft which I a my bedroom it gets hot in the summer would this cause this I’ve cleaned the rust off with lega spray and the finest wire wool but it’s returned any advice would be great thanks 

comment_4136745

had this on 2 of my berettas recently my only thought could be high humidity and maybe powder residue attracting moisture it is hydroscopic after all but just as you say on the breech and ejectors basically the only bits of metal in the white.

 

i cleaned it all off and gave them a good oil. threw a few of them silicond ball bags into the safe just to keep ontop of it and checked the other guns

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comment_4136747
2 minutes ago, Sweet11-87 said:

had this on 2 of my berettas recently my only thought could be high humidity and maybe powder residue attracting moisture it is hydroscopic after all but just as you say on the breech and ejectors basically the only bits of metal in the white.

 

i cleaned it all off and gave them a good oil. threw a few of them silicond ball bags into the safe just to keep ontop of it and checked the other guns

I’ve had the silicone bags in for 9 months due to get some more as they are due to run out soon my other guns are ok as far as I can  tell honest on them I’m baffled as to why only my shotgun has it 

 

comment_4136802
5 hours ago, enfieldspares said:

Try storing them barrel down and also put a wipe of oil using a finger on the breech face and the back of the ejectors (the surface that rests against the breech when the gun is closed). Hope it helps.

all my guns get stored muzzle down and are always oiled EVERY TIME they come out whether fired of not.

the bottoms of both my safes are lined with 10 mm thick rubber sheet to stop any possible muzzle damage.

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comment_4136856
7 hours ago, enfieldspares said:

Try storing them barrel down and also put a wipe of oil using a finger on the breech face and the back of the ejectors (the surface that rests against the breech when the gun is closed). Hope it helps.

Thanks for that u will give that a go see if it makes a difference ?

  • Community Expert
comment_4137361

I store my guns in the cabinet, in the silicone impregnated full length gun socks. Apart from some protection from cabinet 'dings', they do help to prevent rust. I am also an 'old school', oily rag person too. I soak a microfiber cloth in a biscuit tin with car engine oil in (GTX). Then suspend it over the tin with a clothes peg and string, and leave it to drain the excess oil off. I then store it in a small plastic container. I wipe down the external metalwork with this, before putting the gun in the sock. A cloth soaked in suitable oil like this will last for several years. The engine oil is heavier and does not 'run off' like a lot of the thinner oils.

comment_4137382

Rangoon oil is good if you can get it. If not any modern equivalent that is as described a "tenacious" oil that has a low evaporation rate (which is essentially the two features or Rangoon oil promoted as its benefit). Any competent supplier to the engineering trade will have a modern take on it. Guns are bare white uncoated metal that is left unused for periods of time during which it needs a coating to stop rust forming. So companies such as the below will understand the problem and perhaps have a solution of you ask the question?

https://www.morrislubricants.co.uk/products.html

https://www.gblubricants.co.uk/

https://www.penninelubricants.co.uk/

  • Community Expert
comment_4137455
On 01/08/2024 at 21:27, bens68 said: I keep my guns in the loft which I a my bedroom it gets hot in the summer would this cause this I’ve cleaned the rust off with lega spray and the finest wire wool but it’s returned any advice would be great thanks 

I moved my guns into the loft in 1988. Very hot in Summer and very cold in Winter. 
There are a lot of guns up there and I have never had a spot of rust on any of them. Like Westley, I use the old oily rag method.

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