I used it on my rifle shooting commercially, and I also took it out earlier to the Thai border, when one was doing other things. It seemed to cling very well and lubricate well too. It doesn’t gum like some gun oils, and it seems to cling like whatever to the proverbial, so even after handling the kit in heavy rain, there still remains a layer. I daresay its better if you don’t handle it, but that’s not the name of the game.
I think I’d try to find a main supplier. £5.50 for a 125 ml can seems a lot of money for little spread.
Of course the other high cling (very very high cling ) preservative oil is chainsaw chain oil. That would be a bit too thick as a lubricant (though it has lubricating properties), but diluted and then painted or wiped on as a preservative oil I think it would be very good (and cheap). I have a chainsaw, and but nothing has rusted on either chain or cutter bar, and it lives unheated outside all year. I also use chain oil on every garden implement after use, and there is stuff that remains pretty shiny after 5 years in a cold old shed. Some of it only gets used once a year, and the hedgecutter bars are still well oily, bright and sharp, untouched, a year on.
I think the Rangoon oil would be less hassle because you can use it as is, though you’d have to replace it more frequently, but chain oil provides a very acceptable protection I imagine. Well it does for me – just dob it on with a paintbrush, and nothing rusts.
Edited By meyrick griffith-jones on 16/01/2010 19:32:45
Edited By meyrick griffith-jones on 16/01/2010 19:38:54