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Depending on the defect, if only minor, valve grinding compound and a 1/4" brass round head bolt chucked up in a variable speed drill will clean up many lightly abused exit wounds. Pack the barrel end full of hard pressed in & then oiled toilet paper to keep the grit from migrating further in.
Even if you need and find the reamer, still good to polish it up afterwards and I like to throw on a little cold blue. If you go for a professional, do not accept any mill marks regardless how they down play it. It just aint right.
I'm still using an old Clover two sided valve compound can I bought new. it has medium and fine grit albeit after sixty years it is getting pretty dry now and has to be wetted up some before each use... :(
 
Depending on the defect, if only minor, valve grinding compound and a 1/4" brass round head bolt chucked up in a variable speed drill will clean up many lightly abused exit wounds. Pack the barrel end full of hard pressed in & then oiled toilet paper to keep the grit from migrating further in.
Even if you need and find the reamer, still good to polish it up afterwards and I like to throw on a little cold blue. If you go for a professional, do not accept any mill marks regardless how they down play it. It just aint right.
I'm still using an old Clover two sided valve compound can I bought new. it has medium and fine grit albeit after sixty years it is getting pretty dry now and has to be wetted up some before each use... :(
Thank you, I have seen that done many years ago. Might do the trick here.
 

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