Many of the products claim "tung oil based."
I got tired of having to test new products over and over searching for
something that had sufficient dryer added but not excessive.
I switched to pure tung oil with enough straight Japan drier added.
I mix things up with a combination I know will work.
It is generally not worth saving left over Tung oil w' Japan drier.
No more testing and guessing if the mix is correct.
One of the 'tricks' you can use to develop a good correct mix
is to paint it on a piece piece of glass and allow it to set up.
If it sets up in around 24 to 48 hours you likely are well on your way to having a decent mix ratio.
Many of the commercial mixes have excessive drier added to speed up dust free drying time.
You want it fast enough to get some penetration, while avoiding excessive 'dust safe' time.
I still go with an application that is wet on the surface, then wiping it down in about an hour to remove any excess.
When that coat sets up, another wet layer.
Put as many coats till you have your desired surface finish you want.
I no longer use steel wool for rubbing out.
The newer 3M synthetics are much better than the available steel wool.
They also have the advantage of not being oiled.
Their uniformity is better than the available steel wool.
I generally go for a barely matte gloss finish with enough build to slow down moisture
movement into the wood.
For very high accuracy actions there is a lot to be said for the fiberglass stocks with
metal on metal bedding hardware.
I had Kelbly's build up a switch barrel Panda action (right bolt, left port, no ejector, .308 bolt face).
There are no weight limits in killing critters.
For shorter ranges .22-250AI.
For longer ranges 6 mm REM AI.
Tuned and matched shells.
Check case mouth wall thickness and group shells into matching sets before turning them to 0.0100 in final thickness.
I want those bullets centered up .
If a shell has excessive variation on the neck thickness it likely goes down to the body of the case.
I measured enough wall thickness run-out on the case body to affect accuracy even after turning the neck thickness.
I shoot off a portable varmint bench with older
https://protektormodel.com/products/windage-top-aluminum-rest-61
I want that ground hog in pieces with a single shot.
Learn and use the bench rest 'tricks.'
The bench rest guys have a bunch of nice 'tricks' for the ultimate in accuracy.
Might as well take advantage.
After fire forming I usually shoot each case two more times so they have a more
uniform case temper.
The prep time makes it worth annealing when accuracy starts to wander.
After annealing I fire them twice to get hardness back up slightly.
I have a log book for each barrel to track things.
I no longer have to pay to hunt.
I have farmers that call me when they notice crop damage.
We arrange a time to shoot, and I go to the field and thin down the
newest crop of varmints.
It is often only a single time per season on each field.
Most of the farmers have placed short berms on the far edges of the fields
to make shooting safer.
I have a 5 to 6 foot high berm to shoot into.
I 'sell them' on the berm since it makes assessing damage with a spotting scope easier.
I will loan them an older Kowa spotting scope if they want to monitor that way.
60 mm models.
I often get a free lunch for dropping by.