Hello Everyone! I just finished a restore/repair to a Lyman GPR I bought recently. I looked good but had a cracked stock, wood gouged out under the lock, around the lock and a notch where someone mounted a side sight. The crack looked repairable with old glue which had come loose but I found the lower 1/5th of this stock was so riddled with woodworms that it could not be pulled back together and that light sanding exposed numerous woodworm tracks and sawdust rendering it weakened , un-useable and unstable to accept recoil especially with that style butt plate. I decided to replace the area damaged by woodworms and label it the FrankenHawken . If I never see another wood worm riddled piece of wood it will be too soon.
The Lyman needed :
Inletting the tang to the proper depth
Adjusting the tang face angle
Repairing the trigger group
Inletting the trigger group to the correct depth
Re-working the snail
Drilling and tapping the snail’s screw to 10/32 and replacing the torx screw with Track’s (re-worked) drum screw
Removing the accuglass thick bedding Bubba did in lieu of correctly inletting the tang to the correct depth (real fun job)
Then the wood work:
Removing large botched chunk from under the lock and barrel channel and fitting correct replacement
Patching in stock notch for side sight
Patching in missing piece from the lower lock area
Patching in a botched mess in the rear side of the barrel channel
Removing the lower 1/5th the the Purina
Woodworm Chow stock and replacing it with American black walnut.
CRIMONY! What a mess it was but yet it has a pretty good bore!
Looking forward to about an additionally six coats of oil finish on both stocks and calling it good enough. I cannot even think how many hours that thing took.
Snooterpup
The Lyman needed :
Inletting the tang to the proper depth
Adjusting the tang face angle
Repairing the trigger group
Inletting the trigger group to the correct depth
Re-working the snail
Drilling and tapping the snail’s screw to 10/32 and replacing the torx screw with Track’s (re-worked) drum screw
Removing the accuglass thick bedding Bubba did in lieu of correctly inletting the tang to the correct depth (real fun job)
Then the wood work:
Removing large botched chunk from under the lock and barrel channel and fitting correct replacement
Patching in stock notch for side sight
Patching in missing piece from the lower lock area
Patching in a botched mess in the rear side of the barrel channel
Removing the lower 1/5th the the Purina
Woodworm Chow stock and replacing it with American black walnut.
CRIMONY! What a mess it was but yet it has a pretty good bore!
Looking forward to about an additionally six coats of oil finish on both stocks and calling it good enough. I cannot even think how many hours that thing took.
Snooterpup