The receivers on most over-unders guns are given a plain silver finish but every now and again I see pictures of some with lots of blue and brown marks on the surface. What is this, and why are they not polished smooth like all the others?
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MIKE GEORGE
This is called colour hardening, and it is a traditional way of finishing actions.
In other industrial processes it is known as case hardening, a process which forms a very hard surface on steel.
It works like this: A steel component is heated, and kept hot for some time, while buried in charcoal.
Carbon from the charcoal is absorbed into the surface of the steel, forming a very hard crust.
Gun makers discovered that, by adding other components to the charcoal, colours, primarily blues and browns, could be brought out in an abstract pattern.
The additives to the charcoal were many and varied, and often kept secret from competitors.
One of them was tiny pieces of leather. Case hardening does not always produce a pattern of colours.
For many years the deep blue finish on Colt handguns was much admired.
This was achieved by heating the components in charcoal made from animal bones.
The use of game cover for shoots has changed drastically in recent years, says Felix Petit, driven by an increase in government grants
By contacting your PCC about your local force’s firearms licensing performance you can help instigate change, says Conor O’Gorman.
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