![Birchwood Casey Perma Blue Liquid Air Gun Shotgun Blueing 90ml [13125] Blue Rifle](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51wAVYkHexL._AC_SL3840_.jpg)

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Birchwood Casey Perma Blue Paste/Liquid is a professional-grade gun bluing solution designed for steel firearms (excluding stainless steel). It delivers a fast-acting, non-streaky, blue-black finish that restores and protects metal surfaces from corrosion. Trusted by gunsmiths and collectors since 1948, this product requires no heat and can be applied easily with swabs for precise touch-ups or full rebluing.















| ASIN | B000LC601K |
| Best Sellers Rank | #6,056 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #78 in Gun Cleaning Kits |
| Brand | Birchwood Casey |
| Brand Name | Birchwood Casey |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 3,228 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00029057133226 |
| Included Components | see descritption |
| Item Type Name | Birchwood Casey Perma Blue Paste Gun Blue 2 ounce tube |
| Item Weight | 57 Grams |
| Liquid Volume | 2 Fluid Ounces |
| Manufacturer | Birchwood Casey |
| Manufacturer Part Number | BC-13322 |
| Model Number | BC-13322 |
| UPC | 029057133226 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | See Manufacturer |
H**E
Follow the directions and don't rush the process for a great result.
This is a review for Birchwood Casey PSP Gun Blue (3oz) bottle. First let me start by saying my purpose for using this product was not typical. I had some hitch rings that were steel with zinc plating that I wanted to make dark for a woodworking project I had. As this metal (although ferrous - as is required) was zinc plated, my hope was that scratching it with the 0000 steel wool Red Devil 0320 8-Pack Steel Wool, 0000 Super Fine would help open it up enough to reach the ferrous metal beneath. Please note the pictures included with this review for the process I used and the quality of the final product. Let me preface this by saying that disposable gloves and a clean work environment with paper towels or newspaper to catch any spills is advisable. First, I followed instructions: Prepping the metal: 1) Cleaning the metal - They recommend their own brand of cleaner, of course - however I simply used some rubbing alcohol and cotton swabs, which worked well. 2) With a small pad of steel wool, polish the metal lightly to remove old bluing and surface rust. Continue until metal is shiny. (I found that this was particularly important in the later stages when I found uneven darkening in my work. More on that later.) 3) If the metal suffers from deep scratches and/or pitting, sand the affected areas with fine 280-grit paper followed by a steel wool polish. A file may be needed for deep pits. (This step wasn't necessary on my project as the metal was new and without any discernible blemishes.) 4) Whatever you do, don’t try and rush metal preparation. Keep polishing until everything looks right. (This really is critical. Don't start applying the bluing until you have a good finished product that's blemish-free. Your finished work will thank you by looking great.) 5) Re-apply the Cleaner & Degreaser, scrub with a sponge and rinse again with cold water. At this point, be careful not to touch the metal with your fingers as this can leave tell-tale marks after bluing caused by the natural oils from your hand. (Used rubbing alcohol for this process as well and the disposable gloves were on - saves your work from having an "oops". I can't stress this enough - you brush your arm, wrist, hand, finger, nose or whatever on the metal, you cannot see it. But the bluing will help you see it clearly later on.) Bluing: 1) Apply Birchwood Casey Perma Blue Paste or Liquid Gun Blue with an applicator swab over the entire surface to be blued. Work as quickly as you can, but remember to be thorough. Rather than blueing the entire surface at one time, you may want to divide the work into 2 or 3 sections. (I found two things to be important with this step. One, be generous with your liquid. I don't mean pour the bottle over your project, but let your swab soak and don't squeeze it dry. Two, move quickly and smoothly over the metal - I was working on a 2" square surface plus a 2" ring - I did the whole piece in one shot, making sure to coat both sides of the ring plus the outer and inner ring with fresh dips into the bottle.) 2) Allow the blueing to stand on the metal for 30-60 seconds. No longer. Then neutralize the chemical reaction by rinsing immediately and thoroughly with cold water and wipe dry. (30-60 seconds is plenty of time - seriously) 3) After or during rinsing, polish very lightly with fine steel wool to blend the color if needed. If steel wool is used, you must use Cleaner & Degreaser again to remove any surface oils that may have been introduced. Appraise the blueing for coverage. If streaking exists or you desire a deeper/darker blue, simply repeat steps 1, 2, and 3 until the desired color is obtained. (After the rinsing - during the rinsing is kind of silly in my opinion as the water is going to distort what you see. The key here is VERY LIGHTLY. If you go heavy, you'll pull some of the bluing off. If you have spots that are darker than the rest, add a little pressure and they will even out. However, this is one a one step process, so don't worry too much about the color at this point.) 4) Saturate all areas with Birchwood Casey Barricade Rust Protection and allow your new blueing to cure overnight. (Well, I used a very light coating of 3in1 oil and let it sit overnight, which gave it a fantastic finish and cleaned up quickly and easily. I should point out that for me, it took three coats to hit the level of darkness I wanted and to make it very even. On the last round, the metal never saw the steel wool. I rubbed it dry with a towel and lightly oiled it to let it sit overnight.) Overall I was pleased with the process and the outcome. It gave a fantastic browning to the metal which looked amazing on the wood project. Time will tell how well this will hold up, but if it fails, I'm going to assume it's due to the metal not being top grade ferrous metal and instead low grade metal with a zinc plating that needed to be bypassed.
C**9
Great product!
I don't know what it costs in stores, but it works better than I expected. I had to work on a magazine to fit better, and some of the finish was removed. I watched a couple of videos, and did what they recommended. 2 applications and rinse and buff with steel wool after, and the results are great. Laying on the bench, I can't tell it from the other mags.
M**E
Gun Bluing for Instant Aging of Screw Heads
Actually, I didn't buy this to do gun bluing, but to make screws look old by applying bluing to the screws, according to forums on aging metal parts for old-looking type woodwork I was doing. I was in the process of building a table from old rough sawn barn boards, and leaving screw heads visible on one side of each of the legs was going to be unavoidable, so I needed a way to make the screws look old. I decided on large flathead slotted wood screws, as philips head screws aren't vintage, and I needed them to look old and dark right off, rather than bright and shiny new out of the box. Dipping the screw heads into the gun bluing for about 20 seconds, then laying them on a paper towel for a few minutes before wiping the residue off left the heads looking old and faded black, much like what is found on very old wood products where screws were used in the construction. Worked really well for this. The time spent in the liquid allows some variance in the appearance of the aging, so some experimentation showed me just what I wanted. It did not dirty the liquid in the bottle, either, so it remains usable for next time. The screws I used were zinc plated steel, which is about the most common kind of screw out there nowadays, and was indicated in the forums as the ideal for this, next to plain steel; it is not supposed to work on stainless steel.
J**N
Easy application
It is easy to blue a steel works great
A**G
Easier and better than you think
I never guessed bluing metal would be so easy. I spent the $10. I rubbed it on what had become bare metal and it instantly darkened. I didn’t realize an application would be only 30 to 60 seconds. You can wipe it off and repeat until you get as dark a color as you want. Then wipe on a drop of oil and you may have erased decades of what looked like wear but was only the loss of a nano layer of oxidation
B**N
Follow the directions carefully
The stuff works good if you clean the metal and follow the directions
S**L
Great for giving rebuilt mortis/box locks that 100yr old look
130 year old home, likely has, many time painted over, mortis or box locks and this is a great treatment once the paint has been stripped off. Black paint gets the job done, but gun blue gives the metal that old, weathered, patinaed, black/bronze look. Side note, it also gives an aged look to new brass screws.
J**R
Buy the Super Blue instead
I don’t know how this differs chemically from their Super Blue formula but it definitely does (or this was a bad/old lot?). This one just EATS metal, it sheds LOTS of debris from soaked parts, turns black to the eye buy color wipes right off no matter how many applications. The Super Blue was one and done. Same parts same process left No debris in mixture from soaked parts none zero- some discoloration of liquid but that’s it. Spend the extra buck and get the Super Blue by the same company.
A**N
Good product
Only complaint if I had to come up with one is that the package was leaking when I got it but other then that it work’s really well.
K**I
Great stuff !
Great product , First time using this product and I was highly impressed..great for using for the restoration of old hand tools. And a little goes a long way..if your haven’t used before it’s very easy and fool proof but please read the instructions so you don’t contaminate the bottle.
M**O
Fácil de usar
Fácil de aplicar y no se cupa gran cantidad a mi parecer
E**A
No funciona
No funciona, ya casi voy por la mitad del producto y no cambia ni un poquito el color del metal.
W**.
Does the job
I used it just once on a small item and it worked well. Hard to say how even it lays on bigger surfaces, but so far so good. Remember that it won't work on chrome/nickel coated surfaces. Like at all. Those coatings must be removed first, and the blue must be applied on iron-based surface.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
5 days ago