Dave,
On the hot linseed oil issue, I should mention that it is a drying/ oxidizing oil, and if sufficient air is present it will dry like a paint film.
Having worked for a company that preserved tubular metal fuselage sections in this way, our method was to drill 1/8" holes at every crossing so oil could flow to all members, fill the entire assembly with oil, plug the fill holes, allow it to sit in one position for a day, then turn it over, allow it to sit another day. Then pull the plugs, rotate the fuselage assembly several times over a period of several hours, until we were sure all the oil was out that we could get out, then plug the holes.
Thinking about it, that may be why Modman's vendors did not want to mess with this item, because of the time involved.
I think on the Piper tube corrosion issue there were a couple of issues working there , on some models PK screws were used to attach belly skins, and wear strips, this allowed air into the structure, on the Tri pacers in particular the lower drain grommets allowed a small pocket of moisture to remain against the tube promoting corrosion, once the tube corroded through from the outside , it was Katy Bar the door. Looking with a bore scope up fuselage tubes that, have, been preserved inside, it is not uncommon to see the tube shiny bright except where a screw has penetrated the tube, then find a rust pocket 2 to 3" long, where the tube has corroded all the way through, with the rust lifting the tube oil off like paint.
B.E.
You are judged not by what you know, but by what you can do.