urbanrifleman
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When you get them in let me know and ill buy one and see how it works out
Will do!
When you get them in let me know and ill buy one and see how it works out
Yes he did.Didn't Shehane make a short range BR stock out laminated Obeche that would make 10.5lb weight? If so I wonder if he still does.
What you fail to take into consideration is the fact that most of us don't have access to long range shooting. In my area, traveling to a range that is over 300 yards entails at least a 150 mile trip. I like to shoot at least once a week and usually twice a week. To shoot at 600 yards would mean I drove 600 miles a week just going to the range. The vast amount of BR recreation shooters would dearly like to be able to acquire short range socks but they are hardly ever offered, even used. We don't compete, we just love to shoot. More importantly, we vastly outnumber long range shooters. Where did you get that 1500 number?How many short range br shooters are there coast to coast? 1500 maybe? Just guessing. I think that number might be generous.
What you fail to take into consideration is the fact that most of us don't have access to long range shooting. In my area, traveling to a range that is over 300 yards entails at least a 150 mile trip. I like to shoot at least once a week and usually twice a week. To shoot at 600 yards would mean I drove 600 miles a week just going to the range. The vast amount of BR recreation shooters would dearly like to be able to aqare shootin
I once whiddled a stock up completely by hand for a break barrel rifle. Did a custom thumbhole butt stock with finger grooves (back when thumbhole was a thing) and a forearm with slight beaver tail. When I was done and it was bolted on the rifle, I added things up and found I had nearly 40 hours into the project including sourcing the wood to the final clear coat. There’s no way a guy could make money doing that kind of work by hand.My best friend growing up worked for Scoville for I think 7 or 8 years building stocks in Michigan before he moved to Canada. I have seen that whole process on what they did to build those. I have seen the entire process of Roy Hunter building his stocks also. I tried to get my friend to stay in the stock business and expand into long range. I was also seriously considering taking over Roys stock building operation. Neither of those stocks are made on a duplicator or a cnc router. There is considerable skill and time involved in making stocks like that. Not to mention the tooling costs and finding sources for the appropriate wood. Its not just any pretty wood. It has to be light for the LV stocks and be dried properly. When you look at what those guys got for a finished stock, theres no way in hell a guy is quitting his day job to get into that business. It was a passion for those guys and they were not having to feed their families on making stocks. McMillan just did a cost analysis on all their stocks. Not all of them went up in price. But mine tripled. Same with most BR stocks. You can find a guy on every corner to chamber a barrel. But try to find a really good stock guy. Why? The truth of it is that when you walk away from that lathe to do a stock, you just cut your pay in half or worse. So, the problem will continue until that changes. You can call around to any of the really good smtihs, the ones doing really good inlets and flawless bedding jobs. If you can even find one that will inlet a flat top stock and do the whole build. Ask them if they will stock your barreled action. I know what they will say.
I need a stock that weighs < 3lbs 4.4oz
With balance weight, bedding, pillars, butt plate.
I have no idea what you mean.Seems to me you could easily do that with a chassis design. Just drop the whole "stock" thing altogether.