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  3. Long-Term Firearm Storage

Long-Term Firearm Storage

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  • E Online
    E Online
    Ember
    wrote on last edited by admin
    #1

    Long-Term Firearm Storage

    Why it matters: You're not touching these guns for months or years—deployment, moving, downsizing, inheritance—and the enemies are rust, seized actions, and thieves. Get this right and your guns emerge ready to shoot. Get it wrong and you're looking at corrosion, non-functioning parts, or empty safes.

    The big picture: Three things will kill stored firearms faster than anything else—moisture, dirt left behind, and idiots with crowbars. Control those and you're golden.

    Clean Everything First—No Exceptions

    The bottom line: Store a dirty gun and you're storing moisture, powder residue, and copper fouling that'll eat your metal while you're away. That quick range-day wipe-down isn't enough.

    Strip everything completely. Semi-autos get field stripped minimum. Revolvers need cylinders out. Bolt guns need bolts removed. I've seen too many "stored clean" rifles come out with chambers that look like they were stored in a salt mine.

    Run dry patches until they're spotless, then apply real rust preventative—not your everyday CLP. Standard gun oils dry out or migrate off over time.

    Between the lines: Cosmoline is military standard for decades-long storage because it works, even though it's messy as hell and needs mineral spirits to remove. For civilian storage where you might want these guns in a few years, Barricade or Break-Free Collector are more user-friendly.

    Coat every metal surface—inside and outside on blued guns, don't skip stainless because it still rusts. Light coat on wood stocks too, especially where wood meets metal. Water loves those junctions.

    Humidity is Your Enemy

    Why it matters: Rust starts above 50% relative humidity. Keep storage below that and you're winning. Idaho's dry climate helps, but basements, garages, and storage units still trap moisture like nobody's business.

    Gun safes create their own problems—they restrict airflow so moisture gets in and stays in. A safe in a basement is basically a humidity trap unless you fight it actively.

    What this means for you: Golden Rod dehumidifiers work because they're simple—electric heating elements that raise safe temperature a few degrees and keep air moving. Run them continuously, they use about as much power as a nightlight.

    For desiccants:

    • Silica gel for small spaces
    • Eva-Dry or Dry-Packs for safes—rechargeable and hold more water
    • Indicating types that change color when saturated
    • Avoid foam desiccants in cheap cases—they're worthless

    Stick a digital hygrometer in your safe and actually check it. If humidity's climbing above 50%, your system isn't keeping up.

    Climate-controlled storage beats everything. Heated room in your house maintains stable conditions year-round. Unheated outbuildings swing with weather and seasons—not ideal.

    Storage Containers That Actually Work

    Gun safes: Fire ratings matter for storage—not because guns survive house fires, but because better fire protection means thicker walls and better seals. Bolt it down so it doesn't move and break seals.

    Don't pack it tight. Air needs to circulate. Those organizers claiming to fit 24 rifles in a 12-gun safe are setting you up for rust where metal touches metal.

    Store muzzle-down when possible. Oil and moisture run downward—better out the barrel than pooling in the action.

    Cases and containers: Hard cases with foam trap moisture against metal. Foam absorbs humidity and holds it exactly where you don't want it. For long-term storage, ditch the foam cases.

    Gun socks and silicone-treated cloths work well—they wick moisture away and many have rust inhibitors. Change them annually.

    The best container is no container—guns standing in a safe with air flowing around them, protected by dehumidification and good rust preventative.

    Off-Site Storage Reality Check

    The legal reality: Storing firearms in commercial units is legal in Idaho but creates complications. Temperature swings are brutal—daily heat and cold cycles create condensation inside units and safes.

    What this means for you: You can't run electrical dehumidifiers in most standard units since they lack power. That leaves desiccants that need regular changing, which means regular visits.

    Security is just a padlock on most units. Anyone storing firearms off-site needs a quality gun safe inside the storage unit, bolted down if the facility allows it. Some prohibit floor bolting—check first.

    Friends with better conditions often beat commercial storage. A relative's basement gun room beats a metal shed cooking in summer sun.

    Don't Forget the Ammunition

    Why it matters: Stored ammo lasts decades if kept dry and stable. Same humidity control protecting firearms protects ammunition—below 50% humidity, room temperature or cooler, out of sunlight.

    Keep ammo in original boxes when possible. Cardboard actually buffers humidity changes. Plastic cans with rubber seals work if you add desiccant packs.

    Don't store ammo in magazines long-term. Springs will weaken and loaded magazines create legal complications even in Idaho.

    Legal Stuff You Need to Know

    The legal reality: Idaho doesn't require specific storage methods for your firearms on your property. That changes with kids in the home—you're liable if a child accesses your gun and causes harm.

    Off-site storage brings different rules. Storage facility contracts often prohibit firearms or require disclosure. Read the contract—some facilities are fine with it, some ban it, some require notification. Getting caught means eviction and legal problems.

    Between the lines: Crossing state lines to store guns means following that state's laws. Washington and Oregon have more restrictive requirements than Idaho.

    Estate planning matters. Someone needs to know where your guns are and how to access them legally if something happens to you. NFA items especially need proper documentation.

    Maintenance During Storage

    Set calendar reminders—once yearly for climate-controlled quality storage, twice yearly for less ideal conditions, every three months for unheated buildings or storage units.

    When checking, verify humidity first. Look for condensation inside safe doors. Smell for mustiness—that means water's getting in somewhere.

    Pull a few firearms and inspect for rust, especially corners and crevices. Check wood for cracking or swelling. Cycle actions to redistribute lubricant and prevent seizing.

    The bottom line: Don't fire stored guns without proper inspection first. Old oil turns to varnish, rust builds in barrels, springs weaken. A five-year stored gun needs inspection and possibly re-lubrication before you run ammo through it.

    Mistakes That'll Cost You

    What this means for you—avoid these:

    • Leather storage traps moisture and tannins corrode metal
    • Storing dirty guns because fouling attracts moisture
    • Leaving batteries in optics—they leak and corrode
    • Heavy oil coats attract dust that turns abrasive
    • Assuming stainless is maintenance-free—it still corrodes
    • Not testing inherited/used guns before storage

    Store hammers down and slides forward. Even 1911s designed for cocked-and-locked can be stored hammer-down.

    Coming Out of Storage

    Inspect everything carefully—rust, pitting, discoloration, wood cracks, mechanical function. Clean off storage lubricants completely. Cosmoline especially needs mineral spirits removal before firing.

    Re-lubricate for use, not storage. Heavy preservatives gum up actions. Function-check everything—safeties, magazine fit, cycling.

    What this means for you: Take it slow at the range first time out. Fire a few, then inspect. Check brass ejection and cycling. Verify groups are normal. Stored guns deserve careful break-in sessions, not hard training days.

    The work before storage determines what you get back. Do it right in Idaho's climate and your guns will outlast you. Do it wrong and physics doesn't care what state you're in—you'll get back rust, damage, or paperweights.

    See Also

    • Basic Firearm Cleaning
    • Safe Firearm Storage Options
    • When to See a Gunsmith

    Read the original article in The Handbook | By Steve Duskett


    Join the Discussion

    What are your thoughts on this topic? Share your experiences or questions below.

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    • T Offline
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      t_bulin
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      I've had good luck with using storage bags by Zeerust(?). Just bag up the rifles that aren't going to be used for a while and lock up the safe. As long as the bags are sealed the rifles stay rust free. Just pulled out a 270 after several years in storage and it looked exactly like it did when it went in.

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      • T t_bulin

        I've had good luck with using storage bags by Zeerust(?). Just bag up the rifles that aren't going to be used for a while and lock up the safe. As long as the bags are sealed the rifles stay rust free. Just pulled out a 270 after several years in storage and it looked exactly like it did when it went in.

        S Offline
        S Offline
        steve_duskett
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        These guys? https://www.zerustproducts.com/products/electronics-tools-parts/multipurpose-vci-poly-bag/

        Those do look handy to have; thanks for the recommendation! And welcome to the campfire.

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