Pete,
I have seen where patterns have changed. But to tell you the truth I had never considered that they would brown or black the pattern away. How common was this?? I remember with the Parker guns, early on, when they changed to fluid steel, a big fuss was made about all the new "black barreled" guns. Or was that a English/Euro thing? Tim
Tim,
You have to ask the question, "How long does it take to produce the wonderful effect that CFW acheived?" I have had this conversation at length with Dale Edmonds and Keith Kearcher. No one has found a way to reduce the working time to even 1 day per set of barrels.
We know that at their zenith the Belgians were producing 156,000 barrels a year. So if only 50% of that is damascus, how common do you think simple black or brown finish was?
There are other finishes that no one is really doing today. A deep etch with hydrochloric as is common on many Germanic guns for instance.
I believe the range was much greater than we have today. We want to show off damascus barrels. Some one who would completely blacken damascus today is looked at a bit cockeyed. "They are trying to pass it off as fluid you know."
Pete