Hahaha!
...and that I'm "Delta", and will need it ASAP for an importand operation?
I got the Brownell's olive drab bake-on paint for my AR carbine (the one we shot at your house last week-and needs a couple of washers for the compensator/flash suppresor), but from what I've heard, that's not the same thing as Duracoat.
I was looking at the Brownells. Maybe easier for me.
Right now, what little money I have (and it isn't much!) will be going towards ammo, magazines, and spare parts. I figure paints and protective coatings will probably always be available.
I'm shopping a couple of Norcs before everything dries up in Canuckistan.....
GS.....
Few things about painting...
1. Painting is all about patience...and make sure you properly prep the surface of the items to be painted.
2. You need to disassemble your gun as much as possible for painting...
3. Bake on Paint from Brownell....the best I found is the Molycoat.. I use it on a lot of things, paint a light coat, go back once it dried, paint another coat...repeat process untill all parts are evenly coated. bake in oven per instruction. but the smell can be a little distracting....so make sure you are in an open air space.
4. Duracoat is what I use most of the time, you need an airgun to spray duracoat, but there are compressed air canister you can buy to hook up to your airgun.. the overall cost are not very expensive at all....if you are good at what you do, you might even turn it into a profit center for you painting guns and parts for your local gun guys...
5. Norrell Moly Resin is the best high temp paint you can get, it is more durable than anything out there, including the Duracoat. I use it to paint my pistols.
my Duracoated MRP
my Norrell Moly resin 1911
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no ear protection?
ouch