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AR-ts & Crafts: Painting and Staining

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With this installment on the blog, we return to the earliest days of Norseman Creative, where I primarily wrote about the firearms I had experience with. Remember! My second novel, Retrograde Absolution, is out for purchase! Just in time for the holidays! I do have a limited stock of my first novel, Frozen Reaction, in the blog’s shop page available for purchase with a signature. Otherwise it too can be found on Amazon or wherever you get your books. Anyway, enjoy this esoteric deep dive into a rifle I really didn’t need to fiddle with but did so anyway.

A quick perusal of my blog or either of my two novels will easily reveal that I am a big gun nerd. I have had a fascination with firearms and their skillful use since I was young. The history behind various firearms, the engineering behind them, and the use of firearms has always fascinated me. This fascination grew from a love of hunting, and led to competitive marksmanship, amateur gun-smithing, and firearm collecting.

It has also led me to become bored with AR-15s. Yes, America’s most popular, most controversial rifle is boring. Especially a plain old, boring black rifle that looks just like the same rifle every other goober has in their safe. Several years ago, I assembled an AR-15 that looked just like everyone else’s, and it finally got to me during a weekend trip to the shooting range.

I built this rifle using my 2d Lt paychecks way back when I used to live in Texas. When I first finished it, it had a polymer Magpul handguard, simple iron sights, a flashlight on the left side of the handguard, and a padded sling. It was simple but effective, and I used it in several action carbine stages at the San Angelo Gun Club.

An old photo, with an old dog, and the original configuration of my rifle.

Over time, I decided that the rifle needed some changes. First, the addition of an affordable red dot optic from Vortex, the SPARC AR. I was drawn to this particular optic because it ran on AAA batteries, and in the hypothetical scenario where the red dot ran out of juice, I thought it would be easier to source AAA batteries than the button style batteries than were used by the Aimpoint PRO mounted on my first AR-15. Next, I replaced the polymer Magpul handguard with an aluminum, two-piece rail from Midwest Industries. Finally, I switched to a sling with a thinner pad and a Quick Detach mechanism.

My Dad shooting the AR-15 in its “interim” configuration. Note my first AR-15 in the foreground, totally blending in with the Minnesota Snow.

This configuration was fine, for a time. I shot the rifle well, but I have to admit that the only real performance upgrade was the optic. Through many a range trip, the rifle punched consistent holes in paper, and I was pretty much happy with it.

But then people started asking me if I owned Night Vision Goggles, because I seemed like the type of person who would own Night Vision Goggles. Even my wife was surprised that I didn’t have any Night Vision Goggles when she asked me if I had a pair of Night Vision Goggles, even though we’ve been together for five years and she hadn’t seen me use any Night Vision Goggles. It made me think I should get some Night Vision Goggles, and that if I was to get Night Vision Goggles, I would need to set up my AR-15 for use with Night Vision Goggles.

The thing is, NVGs are very expensive, and I have bills to pay. In addition to the NVGs, I would need some sort of headgear to wear that can mount the NVGs, then a laser aiming module to help aim while using the NVGs, next a infrared illuminator so I can see what I am doing when its really dark, and then finally all the knick-knack pieces and mounts that go into making that whole system function. With the two-piece, drop-in handguard, my rifle wasn’t really set up use under night vision. I needed to make some changes to the rifle in order for it work under NVGs, especially a new rail and a new optic that would work with NVGs and a laser. Therefore, I had my excuse to start tinkering with a fine rifle again.

First thing first though, I had to finish my gunsmith bench, which I built with the help of two friends way back in 2021. The bench was built using wood from an old pallet out of a shipment of clay pigeons to a gun club I belonged to back then, and the wood had yet to be stained and a vice grip installed. One weekend while I waited for rifle parts to arrive in the mail, I got to business sanding, staining, and augmenting my homemade gunsmith bench.

The bench, complete with vice grip, powerstrip, and neat Ryobi task lamp that runs on Ryobi batteries

After the bench was done, I had to remove the rifle’s old handguard and optic. That step was easy enough, but then I had to remove pieces of the rifle to fit the free-floating handguard that I bought to replace the old one. That turned out to be more challenging than I thought, and my use of a Dremel and a pair of tin snips was less than elegant. After a couple hours of sweating in the humidity, cussing at inanimate objects, and pounding various parts of my rifle with suboptimal tools for pounding, I finally got my handguard on. Crooked.

A victory photo taken a little too early

After putting the new optic and magnifier on, I realized that the handguard hadn’t lined up quite right when I was torqueing down the screws. Rather than fix it right then and there, I put the rifle back in my safe and went for a walk with my dogs. The rifle sat in my safe until the following weekend, when I hauled it back out on Friday night and re-set the handguard to align properly. Now satisfied, I went to the shooting range first thing Saturday morning while Jenny was out scuba diving.

Unfortunately, I find myself at a third duty station in a row where finding a good rifle range is out of the question. I went to a very nice indoor range, where the maximum distance was only 25 meters, hardly a good measure of a rifle’s accuracy. The rifle printed good enough groups for a hasty zero, and I spent the remainder of my ammunition getting acquainted with the EOTech XPS-3 and G45 magnifier.

Through my military service in the Air Force, I have grown more accustomed to traditional red dot optics like the Aimpoint M68 Close Combat Optic found on a USAF issued M4 Carbine or the Vortex SPARC AR that was previously on this rifle. I did find that I needed a bit of practice with the EOTech before it felt natural, but once I figured it out, I really liked it. A criticism I have of this particular unit is that the adjustment screws to zero the optic did not have a very positive click on the left/right screw, even though there was a positive click on the up/down screw. Even so, I got the optic zeroed quickly.

Shooting rifles is fun, but just standing there in a single lane, shooting at a single target gets boring. Especially at short range!

While I was at the shooting range, I decided that I was bored with a black and grey rifle, and my only recourse was to paint my rifle. After I had finished punching holes into paper, I went out to procure some camouflage spray paint.

I bought three different colors of camouflage spray paint; green, tan, and brown. For a previous rifle that I spray-painted, I went with a tan-dominant color scheme since I was headed to West-Texas, land of brown grass. This time, I decided I wanted a green dominant spray paint pattern since I live in Hawaii, land of Aloha and lush green jungles.

The old rifle, my first AR-15 ever.

The first step I took was to remove the EOTech and Magnifier, and to take out the bolt carrier group and charging handle. Next, I took off the stock and removed the rubber recoil pad, and then taped up the muzzle, forward assist, trigger, front sight, and the charging handle slot in the receiver. Finally, I took an old, green Magpul P-Mag and removed the spring and follower before putting the shell back into the magazine well of my rifle.

Ready to paint

Using the same cardboard box I used to stain the gunsmith bench, I sprayed both the rifle and the stock with the green spray paint. I have always been partial to the expedient spray paint camouflages where the painter paints a rifle a solid color, and then uses different colors in stripes to create a camouflage pattern. Initially that was the plan, but after I finished spray painting my rifle green, I decided I liked it that way for now. It reminded me of the little green army men I used to play with, so a solid green the rifle will stay for now.

I also chose not to paint the optic or the light at this time. I may choose to do so in the future, but for now I am not entirely sure that I am sold on the EOTech and may want to re-sell it or put it on a different rifle later. So the optic and the light remain in the current color, black, until I decide I love the EOTech. I know I want to replace the light, but that’s for a different time all together.

Black on green looks alright I think.

After I was done painting and the paint had dried enough, I put the rifle back in the safe to cure. Even though the rifle was done to my satisfaction, my creative juices were still flowing. Luckily for me, I had a bunch of rifle magazines lying about, unpainted. Fresh canvasses to experiment on. Digging through my equipment bins, I came up with a couple extra steel canvasses, a few old aluminum canvasses, some P-Canvasses, an old Troy BattleCanvass, and a SureFire 60 round quad-stack canvass.

A sample of canvasses. From Left to Right: Aluminum, Gen 2 Polymer Magpul, Troy BattleMag, Elander Steel

I taped up the feed lips and openings on all the metal magazines to keep paint off the followers and out of the springs. For the Magpul magazines, I simply removed the magazine baseplate and pulled out the spring and follower. For all the magazines, I taped off the top third of the magazine, where it inserts into the rifle and where I put my inventory markings so they wouldn’t get all fouled up.

With tape.

For the first batch of magazines, I painted them all a solid brown, simply because I hadn’t painted anything brown yet. After I painted both sides of each magazine, I set the steel magazine aside to let it just be a brown magazine.

Next, I took the three remaining magazines and set up three different camo patterns. One would be a simple stripe where I would next spray different color stripes of spray paint across the magazine. The next would be a “tiger-stripe” inspired magazine where I would tape off different shapes to get the desired pattern. The last one would be a “chip” pattern where I would tape off different shaped blotches and spray over them to get my desired pattern.

I finished these four magazines and decided to continue experimenting. I didn’t really like the chip pattern, but the spray pattern and tiger-stripe turned out all right. I also decided to go for a more green-dominant color scheme as well. Finally, I found a can of grey spray paint we used on my wife’s car to patch a ding and a can of brighter, green spray paint we used to paint our mailbox. I figured I would use them to see what those looked like as well.

From Left to Right: SureFire Quad stack, Magpul P-Mag, Elander Steel

I repeated the process from the first group of magazines on these magazines and liked the results. I made one error, however. On the first group of magazines, I removed all the tape about thirty minutes after finishing all the spray painting. On the second group of magazines, I finished spray painting and then went to watch TV with my wife and then went to bed. Because I didn’t take the tape off right away, the second batch of magazines had their paint cure a bit more, and the tape was harder to remove, and little blue tape fibers are still present in some instances. Nothing a little use or maybe just some sand paper wouldn’t fix, but annoying.

My favorite results were the solid green magazine, which ended up looking like the magazine from a G.I. Joe rifle, and the basic stripes.

All in all, this was a fun, easy project to scratch a creative itch. The best thing about it was that it was cheap, especially considering that all these magazines were purchased a long time ago, and in bulk. I highly recommend painting whatever rifle or accessory you have as a fun and easy way to personalize your equipment.

A complete representation of my painting ability.
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