Oxpho-blue creme gun blue 4oz
Item Package Dimensions L x W x H | 5.43 x 3.86 x 2.05 inches |
Package Weight | 0.14 Kilograms |
Brand Name | Generic |
Manufacturer | Generic |
J**N
The best made.
I have restored dozens of guns. This is the best hands down. You need to get the metal bare first. 4 or 5 applications works great.
B**R
Creme Oxpho is the Boss
Even though this is branded Brownells it is listed as a Generic product. Check the difference in the labels. I purchased both the creme and regular types of Oxpho. The creme type does the best job. I treated a receiver and barrel of a 65 year old firearm that was covered in a great deal of surface rust. The results were amazing. Two people who saw the results thought it had been hot blued. The creme took 3 applications to achieve the desired results.
R**.
Fair enough
Not what I thought it would be. After four coats I can still see the metal but it covered the pistol I guess it is ok.
R**M
Produces very good results, easy to use.
This definitely yielded both better darkening of steel and ease of use than the liquid BC branded cold blue that I have used in the past.Application is more controllable and cleanup is easier as well.Not a perfect match for most hot blued items, but very close.
B**R
This is the one you want for small jobs. Get the cream.
I've tried various bluing solutions, but this one takes the cake. The cream formula is so easy to apply and control, making it perfect for both large projects and small touch-ups. I was amazed at how quickly and evenly the blue developed, and the final finish is absolutely professional-grade. It's durable, rust-resistant, and looks fantastic.
J**S
Works well, easy to use.
Works well for me for protecting tooling I've made. I'm not interested in matching any particular gun, just making a surface to hold some oil and prevent rusting. Sometimes it comes out a little on the brown side, sometimes more black. I don't know if this is a property of the steel or surface contamination.I also use it for making brushed steel label signs with sheet metal by coating the metal with a layer of black paint, laser engraving the paint away where I want black, and then using this product to darken the metal through that mask. Very nice results, but… some of the paints I've tried leave a residue that greatly inhibits the darkening unless washed off and sometimes there isn't an obvious solvent cleaning the exposed area without taking off the masking. Rustoleum chalk board paint works well. Rustoleum peelable black works well, and if a simple design you can just cut the outlines and peel out the large areas which is much faster. I suspect most dark spray paints work, I just like how easily the lightly cured rustoleums wash off with acetone when I'm down bluing.
M**N
WHERE DO YOU GO WHEN THE MFR IS BACKORDERED??
THIS STUFF HAS BEEN THE 'GOLD STANDARD' to localised re-bluing after doing mechanical work to firearms that disturbs the original bluing. I was doing a lot of work including rebuilding, fitting new parts, etc. and finished my bottle. the MFR was backordered for several weeks. Alas! A quick search and I located not only the product but the creme formula which is more manageable than the liquid. What more can I SAY? OH... yeah... I saved $12. shipping as I ordered them on my Prime account!
K**K
Tried it
Bought to reblu a 45mag. I used a whole bottle and still didn't come out blued correctly. Didn't streak or blotch ,just wouldn't really darken gun at all. I prepped the surface above and beyond normal means bc I wanted it perfect. I've used this product before with no real issues until now. It just wouldn't blu gun.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago