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ok lests see some recoil pad fitting.I love Gibson’s Hardware! Fixed it.........and yes Kim.....I’m still wearing the same boots.
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Do you want me to explain how I do it or are you yanking my chain?ok lests see some recoil pad fitting.
On maple with for sanding back, try wiping the wood with water first. It may help with the blotching. Also, I think you could dilute the black a lot more and do more coats where the figure looks ok.Finished shaping, cut the bolt slot and first coat of black. I got frisky and tried a little flair on the grip cap. I think I’m going to do a rotisserie epoxy coat on it. The grain in this piece doesn’t warrant sending it to Bc’z.
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Do you want me to explain how I do it or are you yanking my chain?
i really was interested how you do it as you do a nice job on them and i have been doing a few lately but i get them pretty good so i dont want you wasting a bunch of time on itDo you want me to explain how I do it or are you yanking my chain?
Finished shaping, cut the bolt slot and first coat of black. I got frisky and tried a little flair on the grip cap. I think I’m going to do a rotisserie epoxy coat on it. The grain in this piece doesn’t warrant sending it to Bc’z.
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Looking good Josh!!Thanks. I’m going for just black on this one. I sanded to 320 and put on that coat with plans to sand 400 and 600. I’ll check out those vids.
Test on some scrap. You'll probably find the higher sanding grits have a big effect on your dye penetration. You might be able to use finer grits to limit some of the dye overwhelming the endgrain.Thanks. I’m going for just black on this one. I sanded to 320 and put on that coat with plans to sand 400 and 600. I’ll check out those vids.
Ok! I used to rough grind them using a template, then finish after they’re glued on. These days I screw and glue them on when my butt is formed, but not final sanded. Then, I sand them off to match the butt. I bolt my angle sander to a table, use 80 grit until I’m close, then switch to 120 to finish. Hold the stock parallel to the disk and slowly work your way around the butt. Capiche?i really was interested how you do it as you do a nice job on them and i have been doing a few lately but i get them pretty good so i dont want you wasting a bunch of time on it
Thanks
I like that! What action are you putting in there with that drop belly? If i missed that im sorryWell, I hit the shop early and got started. Put on a dark black coat and sanded. OK, still blotchy. Tried a couple more times with lighter coats. Sanded it down to 600 and tried again. Worked up a pretty good sweat along with a headache. I broke for lunch and some Tylenol. I took a moment to reflect. I wanted a black stock, I’m not Bc’z and I’m running out of time. I went back out to the shop, hit it with a dark coat of black and called it good. I set it up in the rotisserie and put a coat of epoxy on it. It’ll spin until tomorrow, get a light sanding and a second coat.View attachment 1411741View attachment 1411742View attachment 1411743View attachment 1411744
Nailed it !!!I’m not unhappy with it. The grain still flip-flops in the light.
It’s for a Surgeon actioned 6.5 x 47 with Atllasworx bottom metal for AICS magazines. Hence the tactical look.
I just went to check on it. Here are some pics:View attachment 1411792View attachment 1411793
That’s nice of you to say. After the last coat of dark black, I let it dry then wiped it down with alcohol soaked paper towels. I think that’s why I got the highlights of light brown grain.Nailed it !!!
I think that looks pretty dang cool! The light grain lines over the black fiddleback is a nice surprise. I like it and I think what you were a little dismayed about earlier is not even there anymore. Very cool!I’m not unhappy with it. The grain still flip-flops in the light.
It’s for a Surgeon actioned 6.5 x 47 with Atllasworx bottom metal for AICS magazines. Hence the tactical look.
I just went to check on it. Here are some pics:View attachment 1411792View attachment 1411793
i see — thanks for that infoOk! I used to rough grind them using a template, then finish after they’re glued on. These days I screw and glue them on when my butt is formed, but not final sanded. Then, I sand them off to match the butt. I bolt my angle sander to a table, use 80 grit until I’m close, then switch to 120 to finish. Hold the stock parallel to the disk and slowly work your way around the butt. Capiche?View attachment 1411746View attachment 1411747
What did you paint that with?A bit off topic for me but I got bored.
I was in the shop watching the stock spin. Having some free time, I pulled a mahogany 40x copy out of the pile and started sanding it. Another week of free time ahead involved with this next project after the last week long project, I decided to go for some quick satisfaction. Instead of heading to the local Pawn shops to look for a new old gun, I decided to just use what I had on hand.
I gathered up the parts I needed and got to work on a 30br hunting gun I’ve been planning to build. Putting the wood stock off for later, I opened up the barrel channel of a factory stock I had leaning in a corner. Last summer, I bought a Lila 10 twist nutted barrel on “leftover, client backed out” sale, half price. I had him chamber it in 30 br, .330 neck and threaded for a suppressor. I put it on a Remington SA, added a Timney trigger from the bin, found a brake to protect the threads and put it together. Total time was just under 3 hours. I’ll bed it when my bottom metal parts come in. It’ll work for single feed with the 308 box and follower in there.
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Nuthin. It’s an old factory stock that came that way. I think it’s an HS Precision.What did you paint that with?