Thanks Kutter, especially for the mercury warning, I sometimes get a bit careless, but I won't anymore.

The dicropan is extremely tough. Hard to remove. I guess that is it's selling point.

I was extremely careful on the contamination parts, but I did not use the Blue Wonder cleaner I usually use. (With a heat gun).

I do use a heat gun instead of a torch to heat my metal when I blue and put several coats on before I buff out the first time. I use the Brownells soft wire carding wheel for most parts.

It is interesting that some parts came out very dark (both LC Smith part and some Martini parts). But they are really black, not blue black. The dircopan will likely stay on the self in my workroom for a long time too.

Jerry