Just a quickie tip about rust. The time to stop rust is at the begining, the more of a bite it takes the more damage it does.
On the Smith&Wesson revolver shown, you can see some rust starting on the butt of the gun and some residual rust left over, staying on the rubber grips. There is also (at the middle arrow) some dark tarnish started which will soon turn into rust.
A complete clean and oil at this time will solve the problem and assure a good future for this nice gun. Letting it fester would cause some big function and cosmetic issues, and reduce the guns value.
On the Smith&Wesson revolver shown, you can see some rust starting on the butt of the gun and some residual rust left over, staying on the rubber grips. There is also (at the middle arrow) some dark tarnish started which will soon turn into rust.
A complete clean and oil at this time will solve the problem and assure a good future for this nice gun. Letting it fester would cause some big function and cosmetic issues, and reduce the guns value.
On the Smith&Wesson revolver shown, you can see some rust starting on the butt of the gun and some residual rust left over, staying on the rubber grips. There is also (at the middle arrow) some dark tarnish started which will soon turn into rust.
A complete clean and oil at this time will solve the problem and assure a good future for this nice gun. Letting it fester would cause some big function and cosmetic issues, and reduce the guns value.