Give it some time it will break lose.Add a little heat to it be careful of the finish just so it expands and contracts thats how I used to get frozen Garand barrels out had one that took 8 days!
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Give it some time it will break lose.Add a little heat to it be careful of the finish just so it expands and contracts thats how I used to get frozen Garand barrels out had one that took 8 days!
My experience was up to speed was maybe 5 miles an hour. Even so taking the time to deal with them ended up providing a press I wanted for decades and would never pay for new. I probably still have some parts PW sent to me that were incorrect and others were returned as they were for the other metallic reloader which was obvious to me as I have one purchased a long time ago and appreciate the solid old fashioned quality of it. I don't have a Dillon, but isn't the cost of the 550 about $500? Maybe this is why PW now seems to concentrate on other products. The press pictured is an older one with the brass plate. Mine also has the brass plate and a very low serial number which makes me like it even more. This is making me want to start looking for a used CH press which I would love to have. $30 plus maybe a hundred dollars of parts for this PW press is an outstanding value you could probably sell on fleabay for 2x that amount of money and maybe more.
My expectation is they have focused on their shot shell loaders and other products.
If Kroil doesn't work try
DIY Rust Remover
“Machinist Workshop Magazine” did a test on penetrating oils.
the torque required to loosen them.
PB Blaster: 214 lbs;
Liquid Wrench: 127 lbs,
Kano Kroil: 106 lbs
(ATF)/Acetone mix (50/50): 50 lbs.
When I was a kid with my Mec 600 Jr.; The Ponsess-Warren was the ne plus ultra of shotshell loaders. It may well still be.
Unfortunately looks like I will have to do a complete repaint as it is flaking off parts of the main body also.
Too bad as the original paint is a very nice krackle finish .
Excellent score. Please post pics of the restoring process.
To get the rust off of those smaller parts I'd do the following as it has worked for me man times when refinishing lanterns and Coleman items: Get a small plastic tub, a box of washing soda, two pieces of mild steel rod, a car battery charger and a gallon of hot water. Dissolve about 3/4 of a cup of washing soda in a gallon of warm to hot water. Using wooden cloths pins, pint the two rods to the side of the tub (the tub should be about 4 inches across and 8 inches deep.) 180 degrees apart. Bridge the steel rods with some lamp cord to complete a full looped circuit. Fill the tub to the top with water. Now using some steel wire and a piece of dowel, suspend the parts in question fully submerged in the solution and mid-way between the two rods. Hook up the charger to the steel rods and the suspended part. I'll have to look up which gets the positive and which gets the negative but it is important. When you give it power you will see bubbles forming and particles moving from the rusty part to the steel rods. (it is imperative that you degrease everything before you start) In a few hours you may have to rotate the part and clean the sludge off of the rods. A full 12 hour cycle will usually remove all of the rust leaving only clean, rust-free steel.
Success! I still had a can out in the shop. It is a green but I have used the gray in the past. Here is the info off the can.
HAMMERITE
Hammered Metal Finish
Hunting Speciality Products Inc.
265 S. West Street
Lebanon, OH 46036
Hope they still exist. It has been a few years since I have bought some.
Jay
I suggested electrolytic derusting 20 posts ago, but it seems you and I are the only ones that are aware of it. Everybody else wants to go full 'Love Canal' with the petro-chemicals and get a bigger hammer when it won't move....
(Love Canal was a toxic waste super fund site in the early '70s...not some prurient remark...)
I knew what you meant. First EPA superfund site
You'd be surprised by the number that wouldn't; somebody 50 might not know about it, too young. Or not a reader, or no memory.
Another forum, somebody posted a picture of a bulbous silver motorcycle and I said Gort would ride it. Couple of other posters said they had to web search Gort to figure out what I was talking about.
My neighbor happened by while I was watching that same movie and had no idea what it was about, never seen it; he was 45 and the move was 50 at the time.
So I never know....LOL
The day the Earth stood still
I drive by The Ponsness Warren Co. Fairly often, they make a nice press for sure!
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