I'm not seeing a maple blank.It’s stockmaking time again. I’ve got three in the works to get my edge back, then two repairs to do.
I’m working on it!!I'm not seeing a maple blank.
How did you do that Monte Carlo. Ive been thinking about trying to dupe a R700 wood stock. You start looking at one of those though and there are a lot of curved surfaces.Moving forward....slowly...
These are for 2 Tikka t3 223s. Not sure what the 3rd is for yet.View attachment 1213089View attachment 1213090
Geezo I thought this was stock making “school”![]()
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Trade secret!
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Round nose router bit, Round files, gouges etc. You can even make that with sandpaper but it takes a long time. You just have to finish it smooth and plan how you'll do it a bit.How did you do that Monte Carlo. Ive been thinking about trying to dupe a R700 wood stock. You start looking at one of those though and there are a lot of curved surfaces.
I use a Dremel with a small sanding drum, files and wooden dowels with sand paper glued to them. Carefully!!Round nose router bit, Round files, gouges etc. You can even make that with sandpaper but it takes a long time. You just have to finish it smooth and plan how you'll do it a bit.
Thats one way too. Leave the wood alone that is supposed to stay and take the rest. I think I prefer using all hand tools but if there wood if really figured or laminated, rotary tools are nice.I use a Dremel with a small sanding drum, files and wooden dowels with sand paper glued to them. Carefully!!
Ok Thanks- I’m old and dont get excited about anything these days. Those look good. I knew I could cut them by hand but I’m always trying to figure out ways to set things up and cut them with a machine. Ill read through this a few more times.
Thanks twdThats one way too. Leave the wood alone that is supposed to stay and take the rest. I think I prefer using all hand tools but if there wood if really figured or laminated, rotary tools are nice.
Actually, its pretty easy to build a stock. To build one that looks good and doesn't need filler and paint to look good is tougher. Buy a chunk of something cheap like birch and just do like Joshb shows in this thread. You can get by with a lot fewer tools than he uses. Figure out how to use the tools and if the stock looks a little bad, paint it. The only way to learn to use the tools is to hack away at some wood.Thanks twd
I built a stock when this thread was originally going. I built a second one during the quarantine earlier this year. See pic. The second one isn’t even all the way roughed out, but for various reasons I’m giving up on it. Ill put the reasons in a different post. I use a milling machine to do a lot of the work on them.Actually, its pretty easy to build a stock. To build one that looks good and doesn't need filler and paint to look good is tougher. Buy a chunk of something cheap like birch and just do like Joshb shows in this thread. You can get by with a lot fewer tools than he uses. Figure out how to use the tools and if the stock looks a little bad, paint it. The only way to learn to use the tools is to hack away at some wood.
